For anyone reading via RSS: The “I” in my sidebar now wears a mask and is socially distanced. Elaine took the photograph on November 6.
Friday, November 13, 2020
Words of the year
From the Australian National Dictionary Centre, iso : “I think iso will be one way that we will talk about this period for a long time.”
From the Cambridge Dictionary, quarantine: “Our editors . . . were interested to find a new meaning emerging: ‘a general period of time in which people are not allowed to leave their homes or travel freely, so that they do not catch or spread a disease.’”
From the Collins Dictionary, lockdown : “a unifying experience for billions of people across the world, who have had, collectively, to play their part in combating the spread of COVID-19.”
From Dictionary.com, pandemic : “The pandemic defined 2020, and it will define the years to come. It is a consequential word for a consequential year.”
Also from Dictionary.com, the People’s Word of the Year, unprecedented : “Overfamiliarity, if not overuse, has prompted the popular sentiment that we should send the word into retirement. But in 2020, unprecedented is the word that just won’t go away.”
From Macmillan Dictionary’s crowdsourced Open Dictionary, lockdown : “a word that came to us from American English but in 2020 has acquired a new meaning that will surely resonate with those who experienced it for the rest of their lives.”
From Macquarie Dictionary, doomscrolling : “a very salient marker of 2020, with its barrage of troubling news, from the bushfires to the US elections and, of course, coronavirus.”
From Merriam-Webster, pandemic : “This has been a year unlike any other (the word unprecedented also had a significant spike in March), and pandemic is the word that has connected the worldwide medical emergency to the political response and to our personal experience of it all.”
From Oxford Languages, many words: “Given the phenomenal breadth of language change and development during 2020, Oxford Languages concluded that this is a year which cannot be neatly accommodated in one single word.”
I’ll add to this post as more words arrive.
By Michael Leddy at 8:24 AM comments: 0
Nail-biter and others
Nail-biter and others: Peter Sokolowski of Merriam-Webster looks at words of the 2020 election.
And yes, people have been looking up interregnum.
By Michael Leddy at 8:09 AM comments: 0
“Himes nailed it”
Seth Jacobs, historian:
“The highest compliment that I can pay to a Jesuit education is that I really, really wish I had received one. Father Michael Himes nailed it when he said, ‘The purpose of an undergraduate education, particularly a Jesuit education, is a rigorous and sustained conversation about the most important questions relating to the human condition with the widest possible circle of the best possible conversation partners.’ And as he points out, many of those conversation partners aren’t breathing anymore, which is why we have libraries and teachers.”
By Michael Leddy at 8:05 AM comments: 0
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Items in a series
Mara Gay, speaking on The 11th Hour a few minutes ago, suggested that it’s necessary to now marginalize Donald Trump* and bring people back to “reality, science, kindness, and democracy.” Yes.
By Michael Leddy at 10:18 PM comments: 0
“5:00 p.m.”?
[Catching up on podcasts.]
From This American Life, “Late Registration,” a story about Kanye West, Wisconsin, and the true meaning of “5:00 p.m.”
By Michael Leddy at 4:59 PM comments: 0
Barack Obama, writing by hand
Barack Obama, in “an adapted and updated excerpt” from A Promised Land, his forthcoming memoir:
I still like writing things out in longhand, finding that a computer gives even my roughest drafts too smooth a gloss and lends half-baked thoughts the mask of tidiness.His tools of choice: a pen and a legal pad.
One great mistake in college comp classes: equating writing with word processing.
Related reading
Obama revisions : OCA posts about writing by hand
By Michael Leddy at 8:42 AM comments: 4
“Big with significance for someone”
From the second novel of The Cornish Trilogy, a moment in the growth of the artist’s mind.
Robertson Davies, What’s Bred in the Bone (1985).
That final sentence makes me think of Willa Cather.
Related reading
All OCA Robertson Davies posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:08 AM comments: 0
Wednesday, November 11, 2020
COVID follies
In Illinois’s Region 6, things are bad. And yet.
Today Elaine saw a Facebook ad for a nearby restaurant’s Thanksgiving buffet. An indoor buffet, $25 per person, $12.50 per “kid,” $62.99 for a family of four. If ever there could be a buffet worth risking one’s life for, it wouldn’t be this one: ham, turkey, fried chicken (choose one), mashed potatoes, noodles, gravy, green beans, dressing, rolls, pumpkin pie. What, no cranberry sauce?
The mitigation measures for our region of the state include no indoor dining at restaurants. Outdoor tables must be at least six feet apart. So how can this restaurant be offering an indoor buffet? Because we have county sheriffs who have proudly announced that they will not enforce COVID restrictions. These sheriffs see themselves as standing up to J.B. Pritzker, our (Democratic) governor, who cannot be allowed to take away our freedoms, &c.
Comments on the Facebook ad run mostly along those lines. I’ll reproduce a couple as typed:
I hope you’re going to be open for thanksgiving it’s a virus or the government don’t shut you downOne comment describes calling the restaurant and being told that employees don’t wear masks and that there’s no social distancing. And they’re planning a buffet? It’s a recipe (sorry) for disaster.
just please dont close or go to carry out only! We need to have strong businesses! Not cowl down to the govt!! You guys stand strong and stay open!
On terse comment caught Elaine’s eye: “On my bucket list.”
Elaine’s reply, surprisingly, stands, at least for now:
Isn’t the bucket list a list of things you want to do before you die? An unmasked Thanksgiving COVID hotspot might do the trick for a lot of people. Take-out food tastes just as good as in-restaurant food.The best way to support a restaurant in the COVID era: order takeout directly from the restaurant. Pay in cash and tip generously. We’ve been doing just that with our favorite restaurant since mid-March. But we’ll be making our own Thanksgiving dinner, which will be a safer and tastier choice than that buffet. And we’ll have cranberry sauce. Also sweet potatoes.
[About those sheriffs: Yes, Illinois is a blue state. But move away from a handful of metropolitan areas, and it’s a sea of red.]
By Michael Leddy at 3:21 PM comments: 2
“No Cap!”’
[Life, June 10, 1946. Click for a larger view.]
After reading a BBC history of the ballpoint pen, I had to go looking for Reynolds. All I can say is that the claim of a four- to fifteen-year supply of ink fills me with existential dread. Notice (bottom left) that the pen is gendered — not unusual in the twentieth century.
The Reynolds name is still around, as an Indian brand owned by Newell Brands. And look closely: the Reynolds Xpres-Dri gel pen appear to be a Paper Mate Ink Joy with slightly different packaging. The tell-tale Paper Mate hearts remain. Newell owns Paper Mate too.
Related reading
All OCA pen posts (Pinboard) : Photographs of the Reynolds 400
[Gendered pens: among others, the Parker Compact Jotter (“for girl-size hands”), the Parker Lady Duofold, the Lady Sheaffer, the Sheaffer PFM (Pen for Men).]
By Michael Leddy at 9:08 AM comments: 0