Since so many of us are fascinated by words and language. I can second
the recommendation for _The Stuff of Thought_, and the others sound
worthy of adding to the TBR pile as well.

Any others to add to this list?

Udhay

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2011/02/10/5-must-read-books-about-language/

Meta: 5 Must-Read Books on Words & Language

   By [27]Maria Popova

   What single Chinese men have to do with evolution and insults from
   Virginia Woolf.

   We [28]love, [29]love, [30]love words and language. And what better way
   to celebrate them than through the written word itself? Today, we turn
   to five of our favorite books on language, spanning the entire spectrum
   from serious science to serious entertainment value.

THE STUFF OF THOUGHT

   [31][stuffofthought.jpeg] Harvard’s [32]Steven Pinker is easily the
   world’s most prominent and prolific psycholinguist, whose multi-faceted
   work draws on visual cognition, evolutionary science, developmental
   psychology and computational theory of mind to explain the origin and
   function of language. [33]The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window
   into Human Nature reverse-engineers our relationship with language,
   exploring what the words we use reveal about the way we think. The book
   is structured into different chapters, each looking at a different tool
   we use to manage information flow, from naming to swearing and
   politeness to metaphor and euphemism. From Shakespeare to pop songs,
   Pinker uses a potent blend of digestible examples and empirical
   evidence to distill the fundamental fascination of language: What we
   mean when we say.

   Sample [34]The Stuff of Thoughtwith Pinker’s fantastic 2007 TED talk:

   [EMBED]

THE SNARK HANDBOOK

   [35][snarkhandbook2.png] In 2009, [36]The Snark Handbook: A Reference
   Guide to Verbal Sparring became an instant favorite with its
   enlightening and entertaining compendium of history’s greatest
   masterpieces in the art of mockery, contextualizing today’s era of
   snark-humor and equipping us with the shiniest verbal armor to thrive
   as victor knights in it. Last year, author Lawrence Dorfman released a
   worthy sequel: [37]The Snark Handbook: Insult Edition: Comebacks,
   Taunts, and Effronteries — a linguistic arsenal full of strategic
   instructions on how and when to throw the jabs of well-timed snark
   alongside a well-curated collection of history’s most skilled literary
   insult-maestros.

     Every time I read Pride and Prejudice, I want to dig her up and hit
     her over the skull with her own shin-bone.” ~ Mark Twain on Jane
     Austen

     It’s a new low for actresses when you have to wonder what’s between
     her ears instead of her legs.” ~ Katherine Hepburn on Sharon Stone

     I am reading Henry James… and feel myself as one entombed in a block
     of smooth amber.” ~ Virginia Woolf on Henry James

     He was a great friend of mine. Well, as much as you could be a
     friend of his, unless you were a fourteen-year-old nymphet.” ~
     Capote on Faulkner

   Ultimately, the book is the yellow brick road to what, deep down, you
   know you always knew you were: Better than everybody else. (Read our
   full review [38]here.)

KEYWORDS

   [39][keywords.jpg] Originally published in 1976 by legendary Welsh
   novelist and critic Raymond Williams, [40]Keywords: A Vocabulary of
   Culture and Society offers a fascinating and timeless lens on language
   from a cultural rather than etymological standpoint, examining the
   history of over 100 familiar yet misunderstood or ambiguous words, from
   ‘art’ to ‘nature’ to ‘welfare’ to ‘originality.’

   The book begins with an essay on ‘culture’ itself, dissecting the
   historical development and social appropriation of this ubiquitous and
   far-reaching semantic construct. It paints a living portrait of the
   constant transformation of culture as reflected in natural language. So
   seminal was Williams’ work that in 2005, Blackwell attempted an
   ambitious update to his text in [41]New Keywords: A Revised Vocabulary
   of Culture and Society.

IN OTHER WORDS

   [42][inotherwords.jpg] As beautiful as the English language may be, it
   isn’t without insufficiencies. C. J. Moore’s curates the most poetic of
   them — rich words and phrases from other langauges that don’t have an
   exact translation in English, but convey powerful, deeply human
   concepts, often unique to the experience of the culture from which they
   came. (For instance, in Tierra del Fuego there is a specific word —
   mamihlapinatapei — for that an expressive, meaningful romantic silence
   between two people. And in China, gagung literally means “bare sticks”
   but signifies the growing population of men who will will remain
   unmarried because China’s one-child policy and unabashed preference for
   male progeny has reduced the proportion of women.)

   Witty and illuminating, the book covers 10 different types of languages
   spanning across various eras and locales, from ancient and classical to
   indigenous to African to Scandinavian, digging to find the precious
   meanings lost in translation.

I’M NOT HANGING NOODLES ON YOUR EARS

   [43][hangingnoodles.png] From researcher Jag Bhalla comes [44]I’m Not
   Hanging Noodles on Your Ears and Other Intriguing Idioms From Around
   the World — an entertaining piece of linguistic tourism, exploring how
   different cultures construct their worldview through the nuances of
   language.

   The book is divided into different themes, from food to love to just
   about everything in between, that reveal specific cultural dispositions
   towards these subjects through the language in which they are framed.

   [EMBED]


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https://www.amazon.com/dp/0631225692?tag=braipick-20&camp=213381&creative=390973&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0631225692&adid=1MQBNGT3FEXW4KVFF9MG&;
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http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2011/02/10/5-must-read-books-about-language/

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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