Richard Lederer celebrated his 65th birthday last week.
Here is his most frequently quoted piece.

Richard Lederer <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

"English is a Crazy Language"
From: "Crazy English"
By Richard Lederer

English has acquired the largest vocabulary of all the world's
languages, perhaps as many as two million words, and has generated one
of the noblest bodies of literature in the annals of the human race.
Nonetheless, it is now time to face the fact that English is a crazy
language -- the most loopy and wiggy of all tongues.

In what other language do people drive in a parkway and park in a
driveway?

In what other language do people play at a recital and recite at a play?

Why does night fall but never break and day break but never fall?

Why is it that when we transport something by car, it's called a
shipment, but when we transport something by ship, it's called cargo?

Why does a man get a hernia and a woman a hysterectomy?

Why do we pack suits in a garment bag and garments in a suitcase?

Why do privates eat in the general mess and generals eat in the
private mess?

Why do we call it newsprint when it contains no printing but when we
put print on it, we call it a newspaper?

Why are people who ride motorcycles called bikers and people who
ride bikes called cyclists?

Why -- in our crazy language -- can your nose run and your feet smell?

Language is like the air we breathe. It's invisible, inescapable,
indispensable, and we take it for granted. But, when we take the time to
step back and listen to the sounds that escape from the holes in
people's faces and to explore the paradoxes and vagaries of English, we
find that hot dogs can be cold, darkrooms can be lit, homework can be
done in school, nightmares can take place in broad daylight while
morning sickness and daydreaming can take place at night, tomboys are
girls and midwives can be men, hours -- especially happy hours and rush
hours -- often last longer than sixty minutes, quicksand works very
slowly, boxing rings are square, silverware and glasses can be made of
plastic and tablecloths of paper, most telephones are dialed by being
punched (or pushed?), and most bathrooms don't have any baths in them.
In fact, a dog can go to the bathroom under a tree -- no bath, no room;
it's still going to the bathroom. And doesn't it seem, a little bizarre
that we go to the bathroom in order to go to the bathroom?

Why is it that a woman can man a station but a man can't woman one,
that a man can father a movement but a woman can't mother one, and that
a king rules a kingdom but a queen doesn't rule a queendom? How did all
those Renaissance men reproduce when there don't seem to have been any
Renaissance women?

Sometimes you have to believe that all English speakers should be
committed to an asylum for the verbally insane:

In what other language do they call the third hand on the clock the
second hand?

Why do they call them apartments when they're all together?

Why do we call them buildings, when they're already built?

Why it is called a TV set when you get only one?

Why is phonetic not spelled phonetically?

Why is it so hard to remember how to spell mnemonic?

Why doesn't onomatopoeia sound like what it is?

Why is the word abbreviation so long?

Why is diminutive so undiminutive?

Why does the word monosyllabic consist of five syllables?

Why is there no synonym for synonym or thesaurus?

And why, pray tell, does lisp have an s in it?

English is crazy.

If adults commit adultery, do infants commit infantry? If olive oil
is made from olives, what do they make baby oil from? If a vegetarian
eats vegetables, what does a humanitarian consume? If pro and con are
opposites, is congress the opposite of progress?

Why can you call a woman a mouse but not a rat -- a kitten but not a
cat? Why is it that a woman can be a vision, but not a sight -- unless
your eyes hurt? Then she can be "a sight for sore eyes."

A writer is someone who writes, and a stinger is something that
stings. But fingers don't fing, grocers don't groce, hammers don't ham,
humdingers don't humding, ushers don't ush, and haberdashers do not
haberdash.

If the plural of tooth is teeth, shouldn't the plural of booth be
beeth? One goose, two geese -- so one moose, two meese? One index, two
indices -- one Kleenex, two Kleenices? If people ring a bell today and
rang a bell yesterday, why don't we say that they flang a ball? If they
wrote a letter, perhaps they also bote their tongue. If the teacher
taught, why isn't it also true that the preacher praught? Why is it that
the sun shone yesterday while I shined my shoes, that I treaded water
and then trod on the beach, and that I flew out to see a World Series
game in which my favorite player flied out?

If we conceive a conception and receive at a reception, why don't we
grieve a greption and believe a beleption? If a firefighter fights fire,
what does a freedom fighter fight? If a horsehair mat is made from the
hair of horses, from what is a mohair coat made?

A slim chance and a fat chance are the same, as are a caregiver and
a caretaker, a bad licking and a good licking, and "What's going on?"
and "What's coming off?" But a wise man and a wise guy are opposites.
How can sharp speech and blunt speech be the same and quite a lot and
quite a few the same, while overlook and oversee are opposites? How can
the weather be hot as hell one day and cold as hell the next?

If button and unbutton and tie and untie are opposites, why are
loosen and unloosen and ravel and unravel the same? If bad is the
opposite of good, hard the opposite of soft, and up the opposite of
down, why are badly and goodly, hardly and softly, and upright and
downright not opposing pairs? If harmless actions are the opposite of
harmful actions, why are shameful and shameless behavior the same and
pricey objects less expensive than priceless ones? If appropriate and
inappropriate remarks and passable and impassable mountain trails are
opposites, why are flammable and inflammable materials, heritable and
inheritable property, and passive and impassive people the same? How can
valuable objects be less valuable than invaluable ones? If uplift is the
same as lift up, why are upset and set up opposite in meaning? Why are
pertinent and impertinent, canny and uncanny, and famous and infamous
neither opposites nor the same? How can raise and raze and reckless and
wreckless be opposites when each pair contains the same sound?

Why is it that when the sun or the moon or the stars are out, they
are visible, but when the lights are out, they are invisible; that when
I clip a coupon from a newspaper I separate it, but when I clip a coupon
to a newspaper, I fasten it; and that when I wind up my watch, I start
it, but when I wind up this essay, I shall end it?

English is a crazy language.

How can expressions like "I'm mad about my flat," "No football
coaches allowed," "I'll come by in the morning and knock you up," and
"Keep your pecker up" convey such different messages in two countries
that purport to speak the same English?

How can it be easier to assent than to dissent but harder to ascend
than to descend? Why is it that a man with hair on his head has more
hair than a man with hairs on his head; that if you decide to be bad
forever, you choose to be bad for good; and that if you choose to wear
only your left shoe, then your left one is right and your right one is
left? Right?

Small wonder that we English users are constantly standing meaning
on its head. Let's look at a number of familiar English words and
phrases that turn out to mean the opposite or something very different
from what we think they mean:

A waiter. Why do they call those food servers waiters, when it's the
customers who do the waiting?

I could care less. I couldn't care less is the clearer, more
accurate version. Why do so many people delete the negative from this
statement? Because they are afraid that the n't...less combination will
make a double negative, which is a no-no.

I really miss not seeing you. Whenever people say this to me, I feel
like responding, "All right, I'll leave!" Here speakers throw in a
gratuitous negative, not, even though I really miss seeing you is what
they want to say.

The movie kept me literally glued to my seat. The chances of our
buttocks being literally epoxied to a seat are about as small as the
chances of our literally rolling in the aisles while watching a funny
movie or literally drowning in tears while watching a sad one. We
actually mean The movie kept me figuratively glued to my seat -- but who
needs figuratively, anyway?

A non-stop flight. Never get on one of these. You'll never get down.

A near miss. A near miss is, in reality, a collision. A close call
is actually a near hit.

My idea fell between the cracks. If something fell between the
cracks, didn't it land smack on the planks or the concrete? Shouldn't
that be my idea fell into the cracks (or between the boards)?

A hot water heater. Who heats hot water? This is similar to garbage
disposal. Actually, the stuff isn't garbage until after you dispose of
it.

A hot cup of coffee. Here again the English language gets us in hot
water. Who cares if the cup is hot? Surely we mean a cup of hot coffee.

Doughnut holes. Aren't those little treats really doughnut balls?
The holes are what's left in the original doughnut. (And if a candy cane
is shaped like a cane, why isn't a doughnut shaped like a nut?)

I want to have my cake and eat it too. Shouldn't this timeworn
cliche be I want to eat my cake and have it too? Isn't the logical
sequence that one hopes to eat the cake and then still possess it?

A one-night stand. So who's standing? Similarly, to sleep with
someone. Who's sleeping?

I'll follow you to the ends of the earth. Let the word go out to the
four corners of the earth that ever since Columbus we have known that
the earth doesn't have any ends.

It's neither here nor there. Then where is it?

Extraordinary. If extra-fine means "even finer than fine" and
extra-large "even larger than large," why doesn't extraordinary mean
"even more ordinary than ordinary"?

The first century B.C. These hundred years occurred much longer ago
than people imagined. What we call the first century B.C. was, in fact
the last century B.C.

Daylight saving time. Not a single second of daylight is saved by
this ploy.

The announcement was made by a nameless official. Just about
everyone has a name, even officials. Surely what is meant is "The
announcement was made by an unnamed official."

Preplan, preboard, preheat, and prerecord. Aren't people who do this
simply planning, boarding, heating, and recording? Who needs the
pretentious prefix? I have even seen shows "prerecorded before a live
audience," certainly preferable to prerecording before a dead audience.

Pull up a chair. We don't really pull a chair up; we pull it along
the ground. We don't pick up the phone; we pick up the receiver. And we
don't really throw up; we throw out.

Put on your shoes and socks. This is an exceedingly difficult
maneuver. Most of us put on our socks first, then our shoes.

A hit-and-run play. If you know your baseball, you know that the
sequence constitutes "a run-and-hit play."

The bus goes back and forth between the terminal and the airport.
Again we find mass confusion about the order of events. You have to go
forth before you can go back.

I got caught in one of the biggest traffic bottlenecks of the year.
The bigger the bottleneck, the more freely the contents of the bottle
flow through it. To be true to the metaphor, we should say, I got caught
in one of the smallest traffic bottlenecks of the year.

Underwater and underground. Things that we claim are underwater and
underground are obviously surrounded by, not under the water and ground.

I lucked out. To luck out sounds as if you're out of luck. Don't you
mean I lucked in?

Because we speakers and writers of English seem to have our heads
screwed on backwards, we constantly misperceive our bodies, often saying
just the opposite of what we mean:

Watch your head. I keep seeing this sign on low doorways, but I
haven't figured out how to follow the instructions. Trying to watch your
head is like trying to bite your teeth.

They're head over heels in love. That's nice, but all of us do
almost everything head over heels. If we are trying to create an image
of people doing cartwheels and somersaults, why don't we say, They're
heels over head in love?

Put your best foot forward. Now let's see.... We have a good foot
and a better foot -- but we don't have a third -- and best -- foot. It's
our better foot we want to put forward. This grammar atrocity is akin to
May the best team win. Usually there are only two teams in the contest.
Similarly, in any list of bestsellers. only the most popular book is
genuinely a bestseller. All the rest are bettersellers.

Keep a stiff upper lip. When we are disappointed or afraid, which
lip do we try to control? The lower lip, of course, is the one we are
trying to keep from quivering.

I'm speaking tongue in cheek. So how can anyone understand you?

Skinny. If fatty means "full of fat," shouldn't skinny mean "full of
skin"?

They do things behind my back. You want they should do things in
front of your back?

They did it ass backwards. What's wrong with that? We do everything
ass backwards.

English is weird.

In the rigid expressions that wear tonal grooves in the record of
our language, beck can appear only with call, cranny with nook, hue with
cry, main with might, fettle only with fine, aback with taken, caboodle
with kit. and spick and span only with each other. Why must all shrifts
be short, all lucre filthy, all bystanders innocent, and all bedfellows
strange? I'm convinced that some shrifts are lengthy and that some lucre
is squeaky clean, and I've certainly met guilty bystanders and perfectly
normal bedfellows.

Why is it that only swoops are fell? Sure, the verbivorous William
Shakespeare invented the expression "one fell swoop," but why can't
strokes, swings, acts, and the like also be fell? Why are we allowed to
vent our spleens but never our kidneys or livers? Why must it be only
our minds that are boggled and never our eyes or our hearts? Why can't
eyes and jars be ajar, as well as doors? Why must aspersions always be
cast and never hurled or lobbed?

Doesn't it seem just a little wifty that we can make amends but
never just one amend; that no matter how carefully we comb through the
annals of history, we can never discover just one annal; that we can
never pull a shenanigan, be in a doldrum, eat an egg Benedict, or get
just one jitter, a willy, a delirium tremen, or a heebie-jeebie. Why,
sifting through the wreckage of a disaster, can we never find just one
smithereen?

Indeed, this whole business of plurals that don't have matching
singulars reminds me to ask this burning question, one that has puzzled
scholars for decades: If you have a bunch of odds and ends and you get
rid of or sell off all but one of them, what do you call that doohickey
with which you're left?

What do you make of the fact that we can talk about certain things
and ideas only when they are absent? Once they appear, our blessed
English doesn't allow us to describe them. Have you ever seen a horseful
carriage or a strapful gown? Have you ever run into someone who was
combobulated, sheveled, gruntled, chalant, plussed, ruly, gainly,
maculate, pecunious, or peccable? Have you ever met a sung hero or
experienced requited love? I know people who are no spring chickens, but
where, pray tell, are the people who are spring chickens? Where are the
people who actually would hurt a fly? All the time I meet people who are
great shakes, who can cut the mustard, who can fight City Hall, who are
my cup of tea, who would lift a finger to help, who would give you the
time of day, and whom I would touch with a ten-foot pole, but I can't
talk about them in English -- and that is a laughing matter.

If the truth be told, all languages are a little crazy. As Walt
Whitman might proclaim, they contradict themselves. That's because
language is invented, not discovered, by boys and girls and men and
women, not computers. As such, language reflects the creative and
fearful asymmetry of the human race, which, of course, isn't really a
race at all.

That's why we wear a pair of pants but, except on very cold days,
not a pair of shirts. That's why men wear a bathing suit and bathing
trunks at the same time. That's why brassiere is singular but panties is
plural. That's why there's a team in Toronto called the Maple Leafs and
another in Minnesota called the Timberwolves.

That's why six, seven, eight, and nine change to sixty, seventy,
eighty, and ninety, but two, three, four, and five do not become twoty,
threety, fourty, and fivety. That's why first-degree murder is more
serious than third-degree murder but a third-degree burn is more serious
than a first-degree burn. That's why we can open up the floor, climb the
walls, raise the roof, pick up the house, and bring down the house.

In his essay "The Awful German Language," Mark Twain spoofs the
confusion engendered by German gender by translating literally from a
conversation in a German Sunday school book: "Gretchen. Wilhelm, where
is the turnip? Wilhelm. She has gone to the kitchen. Gretchen. Where is
the accomplished and beautiful English maiden? Wilhelm. It has gone to
the opera." Twain continues: "A tree is male, its buds are female, its
leaves are neuter; horses are sexless, dogs are male, cats are female --
tomcats included."

Still, you have to marvel at the unique lunacy of the English
language, in which you can turn a light on and you can turn a light off
and you can turn a light out, but you can't turn a light in; in which
the sun comes up and goes down, but prices go up and come down -- a
gloriously wiggy tongue in which your house can simultaneously burn up
and burn down and your car can slow up and slow down, in which you fill
in a form by filling out a form, in which your alarm clock goes off by
going on, in which you are inoculated for measles by being inoculated
against measles, in which you add up a column of figures by adding them
down, and in which you first chop a tree down -- and then you chop it
up.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Archives: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/index.cfm?forumid=5
Subscription: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/index.cfm?method=subscribe&forumid=5

Signup for the Fusion Authority news alert and keep up with the latest news in 
ColdFusion and related topics. 
http://www.fusionauthority.com/signup.cfm

                                Unsubscribe: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.5
                                

Reply via email to