The life of slang
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The life of slang
Oxford University Press, 2012
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Note
Bibliography: p. [314]-323
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book traces the development of English slang from the earliest records to the latest tweet. It explores why and how slang is used, and traces the development of slang in English-speaking nations around the world. The records of the Old Bailey and machine-searchable newspaper collections provide a wealth of new information about historical slang, while blogs and tweets provide us with a completely new perspective on contemporary slang. Based on inside information
from real live slang users as well as the best scholarly sources, this book is guaranteed to teach you some new words that you shouldn't use in polite company.
Teachers, politicians, broadcasters, and parents characterize the language of teenagers as sloppy, repetitive, and unintelligent, but these complaints are nothing new. In 1906, an Australian journalist overheard some youths on a street-corner:
Things will be bally slow till next pay-day. I've done in nearly all my spond. Here, now; cheese it, or I'll lob one in your lug. Lend us a cigarette. Lend it; oh, no, I don't part. Look out, here's a bobby going to tell us to shove along.
What, he wondered, was the world coming to. For the 411, read on ...
Table of Contents
- 1. What is Slang?
- 2. Spawning
- 3. Development
- 4. Survival and Metamorphosis
- 5. The Spread of Slang
- 6. Prigs, Culls, and Blosses: Cant and Flash Language
- 7. Jolly Good Show: British Slang to the Twentieth Century
- 8. Whangdoodles and Fixings: Early American Slang
- 9. Bludgers, Sooks and Moffies: English Slang around the World
- 10. Top Bananas and Bunny-boilers: The Media and Entertainment Age
- 11. Leet to Lols: The Digital Age
- 12. Endsville
- Acknowledgements
- Explanatory Notes
by "Nielsen BookData"