"At Large in the Blogosphere" in tomorrow's Times

Jewls2u Jewls2u at WHIDBEY.COM
Sun May 5 21:52:11 UTC 2002


>>>>Different term "blog".  No web, no weblog; no weblog, no blog.
Maybe yours was an alteration of glo:gg?  (If you've had enough, you
can't tell a b from a g, and the umlaut probably fell into the tub.<<<<<

Well, I was 15 and at a rather strange gathering. The blogmaster might well
have decided his twist on glo:gg...grogg...spody...whatever needed it's own
special name and therefore so did he.

Julienne
-----Original Message-----
From: American Dialect Society [mailto:ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU]On Behalf
Of Laurence Horn
Sent: Sunday, May 05, 2002 11:28 AM
To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Subject: Re: "At Large in the Blogosphere" in tomorrow's Times


At 8:51 AM -0700 5/5/02, Jewls2u wrote:
>I heard the term blog in 1980, but not as it pertains to the internet.

Different term "blog".  No web, no weblog; no weblog, no blog.
Maybe yours was an alteration of glo:gg?  (If you've had enough, you
can't tell a b from a g, and the umlaut probably fell into the tub.)

larry

>  It
>was a drink concocted by a blogmaster which included pretty much anything
>you could think of. It was mixed in a large galvanized tub and if you were
>still standing when the tub was nearing empty you could see chunks of
fruit,
>sand and assorted plastic toys lurking near the bottom.
>
>Julienne
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: American Dialect Society [mailto:ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU]On Behalf
>Of Laurence Horn
>Sent: Saturday, May 04, 2002 6:27 PM
>To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
>Subject: "At Large in the Blogosphere" in tomorrow's Times
>
>
>No, not Safire, but the Book Review, whose "Close Reader" column
>(inside back cover, p. 31) by Judith Shulevitz under the above title
>is all about blogs (<weblogs, an interesting morphologically opaque
>truncation we may have previously discussed) and bloggers.  (A blog
>is 'an on-line news commentary written, usually, by an ordinary
>citizen, thick with links to articles and other blogs and studded
>with non sequiturs and ripostes in sometimes hard-to-parse
>squabbles.) There's also a cite of a reference by Alex Beam in the
>Boston Globe to "Blogistan":  "the Internet-based journalistic medium
>where no thought goes unpublished, no long-out-of-print book goes
>unhawked..."
>
>larry



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