[Ads-l] "Prolific" = 'important, influential'?

Arnold M. Zwicky zwicky at STANFORD.EDU
Wed Oct 16 15:47:30 UTC 2019



>> -----Original Message----- From: Laurence Horn
>> Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2019 9:10 AM
>> To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
>> Subject: "Prolific" = 'important, influential'?
>> 
>> From an obit for Harold Bloom in this morning’s Yale Daily News,
>> https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2019/10/15/harold-bloom-dies-at-89/
>> 
>> ==========
>> Over his lifetime, Bloom amassed several honors and awards — including a MacArthur Genius Grant, a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Fulbright Award — and edited hundreds of anthologies. Some of his more prolific books include “The Anxiety of Influence,” “The American Religion” and “How to Read and Why,” all of which have been translated into languages across the globe.
>> ==========
>> 
>> Maybe just a malapropism rather than a SOTA, you ask? Google hits retrieved for “prolific book” are all reasonable:
>> 
>> Prolific book critic (which of course Bloom was)
>> Prolific book reviewer
>> Prolific book publisher
>> Prolific book collector
>> Prolific book illustrator
>> Prolific book thief
>> 
>> But then I tried “prolific books”, and sure enough, the first page of hits includes
>> 
>> The year has seen the release of some soon-to-be-prolific books that are bound to help navigate us through our socio-political climates
>> Of course, there have always been writers working to dismantle racism (the prolific books of James Baldwin and Angela Davis come to mind)
>> one of the most prolific books on this list
>> Such prolific books as Gulliver's Travels and Tom Jones
>> People like Lloyd Alexander wrote great, prolific books, over a long period of time, and all because they were short.
>> 
>> 
>> Where “prolific” seems to mean ‘wordy’, ’widely read/sold’, ‘important/famous’, or 'written by a prolific author’.
>> 
>> Not in OED, needless to say.
>> 
>> LH

i'm coming into this discussion late, but i took the free-standing "prolific book" examples to have "prolific" as a malapropism for "prodigious".

arnold


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