American Dialect: Pennsylvania

1 December 2002

Pennsylvania is unique among the fifty states in that it has two very distinct major dialectical centers, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Many states have internal variations of dialect, New Jersey for instance is split down the middle with half the state paying homage to New York City and the other have speaking like Philadelphians. But no other state has two urban centers each with its own dialect.

Philadelphia Dialect
The city of brotherly love is the only major urban center on the East Coast with a rhotic dialect. That is Philadelphians don’t drop their Rs the way New Yorkers, Bostonians, and Southerners do. But Philadelphia has other dialectical markers, mostly regarding the pronunciation of vowel sounds.

One such marker is the short E, which in Philly has an /uh/ sound after an R. So merry and Murray sound the same. Linguist William Labov of the University of Pennsylvania (remember him from the article on NYC speech?) conducted an experiment where one Philadelphian read aloud a random series of merrys and Murrays. Another Philadelphian marked down which one he heard. The results were completely random.

The long E also comes in for a change. It is pronounced as a short I. So the name of Philadelphia’s National Football Lig team is pronounced /iggles/, not Eagles. Colleague and fatigue are pronounced /collig/ and /fatig/, not /colleeg/ and /fateeg/ as they are elsewhere in the country.

Another feature, which Philly shares with the rest of the inland Northern-tier states, is the pronunciation of the short A. Before the N, M, TH, S, and F sounds, the short A has an /ih-uh/ sound. Thus, a Philadelphian doesn’t distinguish between the names Ann and Ian. They are both pronounce /ee-ann/. Note that this happens only before certain consonant sounds though. There are so many exceptions that only someone born and bred in Philly will consistently get the pronunciation right.

The long O is often preceded by a short E. So the expression “Yo Joe! Throw the ball!” is pronounced /Yeowuh Jeowuh! Threowuh the ball./

There are some consonant changes too. Like New York City speech, Philadelphians often reduce the T sound in the middle of words to a glottal stop, but only before M, N, and L sounds. So the Walt Whitman Bridge, which spans the Delaware River, is pronounced as the /wall women/ bridge.

And the initial S in words is often pronounced as an SH sound. Thus, to Philadelphian, /shity shtreets/ is not a comment on the sanitation department.

Pittsburgh Dialect
Pittsburgh is the major city in western Pennsylvania and it dominates the linguistic landscape in that part of the state. Pittsburgh is the starting point for the Midwestern pronunciation that stretches across much of the United States.

The chief pronunciation difference is in the /ou/ and /ow/ sounds, which are pronounced as /ah/. Therefore, downtown is pronounced /dahntahn/ and out is /aht/.

Pittsburghese is also known for dropping the verb to be with need or want. So the car doesn’t need to be washed, it needs washed. Another Pittsburgh usage is the phrase and that, usually clipped to n’at or en at, which is used as an intensifier. 

Pennsylvania German (Pennsylvania Dutch)
In addition to the two major dialectical centers of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania is also home to a dialect of German. It is spoken by the Amish, Mennonite, and descendants of other German immigrants in the south central region of the state. It is commonly called Pennsylvania Dutch, a term that is a bit of anachronism. The term Dutch, which is related to Deutsch, used to be a term that was applied to German speakers as well as speakers of the Dutch language. This dialect has also had an impact on how English is spoken in the same region, with particular words and syntax transferring between the two languages.

The Pennsylvania German dialect is rapidly fading. As late as the 1970s, it was spoken by 25% of the residents of Lehigh, Lancaster, Lebanon, and Berks counties, and understood by 65% of the residents. The numbers have declined sharply since, although the influence of the German on English is still seen clearly.

Some of the pronunciation differences are that /v/ is pronounced as /w/, so valley becomes /walley/. Other changes include /p/ shifting to /b/, pull is pronounced as /bull/, and /j/ becomes /ch/, jam becomes /cham/. Vowel changes include lengthening of stressed vowels.

The verb to make does not have just the usual English meanings, but it is also used as one would use machen in German. Hence, in Lancaster County one can make down the road (instead of go) or make the door shut (instead of close). Ain’t is often used in place of won’t, and ain’t can also serve to mark a question, as nicht wahr does in German or isn’t it in English, as in Nice day, ain’t? Other stock phrases include outen the light for “put out the light” and tie the dog loose for “untie the dog.”

Pennsylvania Words

Alladj., finished, dead. Penn. German

Barn burnern., a wooden or kitchen match.

Bermn., the shoulder of a road; western Penn., also Ohio, Indiana, and West Virginia.

Butterbreadn., bread spread with butter; Penn. German.

Cheesesteakn., a type of sandwich, thin strips of steak, melted white cheese, onions, and peppers on an Italian roll; Philadelphia.

Diamondn., a town or city square.

Dressingn., gravy. Penn. German.

Droothn., drought; western Penn., from Scots and N. Irish dialect.

Flitch, n., bacon; surviving dialectical relic from Old English.

Funnel caken., fried dough made by pouring batter through a funnel into deep fat; Penn German.

Gumbandn., rubber band.

Hapn., comforter, blanket; from Scots dialect.

Hissern., type of firecracker, a dud that is broken open and the powder lit.

Hoagien., a submarine sandwich; Philadelphia.

Hutchn., a chest of drawers.

Jagv., to jab, stab; also to jag off, to annoy, irritate, vex; and to jag around, to fool around.

Jaggern., a thorn or burr.

Jumbon., bologna; western Penn.

Medial stripn., median strip elsewhere in the US, grass strip running between the lanes of a divided highway; also found in southern NJ and Hawaii.

Nebn., the nose, also vto neb or to neb about, to pry into another’s affairs, adjnebby, nosy, snoopy, and nneb-nose, a snoop; also found in English dialect.

Pavementn., sidewalk; Philadelphia.

Reddv., to clean, to tidy; from Scots and northern English dialect.

Scrapplen., scraps of pork, ground, mixed with cornmeal, molded into a loaf, sliced and then fried; Penn. German.

Yinzn., equivalent of y’all and you guys, clipping of you ones; western Penn.

Book Review: AP Stylebook & Briefing on Media Law

1 December 2002

For years, the Associated Press wire service, or AP, has published its style manual, allowing journalists and writers from outside the organization to copy the AP’s style. The operative question is why would someone want to.

Unless you are an employee of the AP or writing for an organization that has adopted the AP style as its house style, this book is an uncertain guide. It is designed for daily, newspaper reporting, not for other types of writing. Its rules and conventions are arcane and Byzantine. For example, should one use periods when abbreviating the names of organizations? According to the stylebook, the answer is no, except when you should. AP uses periods with U.S. and U.N., but not with FBI, CIA, or AP.

Now style is, for the most part, a fairly arbitrary thing and consistency may be the hobgoblin of small minds, but consistency in writing style goes a long way. Some of the AP’s exceptions make good sense. There are sound reasons for not abbreviating the names of Alaska (Alas.?) or Utah, but what is wrong with Tex.? Why would someone choose to emulate the peculiarities of the AP style, especially when one is not engaged in newspaper journalism?

In some areas, the AP Stylebook falls down completely. The book offers nine paragraphs on transliteration of Arabic names. One would think that the AP would have sound advice to offer on this subject. But those nine paragraphs do not promulgate even a single standard. Their advice boils down to personal preference or established usage (without giving examples of what those established usages are).

It should be noted that this is not a grammar manual. It does include entries on some common grammatical errors, such as confusing lie and lay, but the book is primarily concerned with style, not grammar. It does have a section on punctuation that is worthwhile. But here inconsistency again reigns. The forward to the section lauds Strunk and White’s Elements of Style as “a bible” for writers, and then proceeds to violate the rules of punctuation that Strunk and White laid out many years ago. There is nothing wrong with AP’s punctuation style, but if it does not conform to Strunk and White it should not point out that book as a reference.

But not all is lost with the book. If one ignores its style advice, it is a rather handy reference book focusing on current events. The stylebook contains over 5,000 entries, many of which contain useful background facts on a wide range of subjects. If you need a quick overview of the structure and tenets of the Presbyterian Church, it is here. If you want to know about U.S. military titles and ranks, you can find it in this volume.

There are also some good hints on writing objectively and avoiding politically biased terms. The book, for example, recommends anti-abortion and abortion rights as opposed to pro-life and pro-choice.

The AP Stylebook contains several sub-sections. There is one on Internet guidelines that consists of a short glossary and three pages of search tips. The glossary is useful, but the search tips are far to simple to be of help to professional reporters and researchers. One would hope that any AP reporter is more skilled and would find the tips woefully simplistic. The sports and business sections provide useful glossaries and tips on reporting on these specialized subjects.

The most substantial of the subsections is the briefing on media law. This section is very useful for any professional writer. It is an excellent overview of U.S. law regarding libel, copyright, and First Amendment protections. Every professional writer in the United States should have a general understanding of the law in these regards, and the briefing here is an excellent one. It is no substitute for expert legal advice, but knowledge like this is essential in determining when one needs to consult a lawyer.

So in summary, if one is writing for an organization that uses the AP style, then this book is indispensable. If not (which is most of us), then it can be a handy general reference work. It wouldn’t be our first choice of books to fill a reference shelf, but if you have a collection of writing references, then this isn’t a bad buy.

Paperback; 420 pages; Perseus Publishing; ISBN: 0738207403; July 2, 2002.

Old English in LoTR

1 December 2002

This month, Peter Jackson’s film The Two Towers hits theaters in the United States. It is the second installment of Jackson’s dramatization of J.R.R. Tolkien’s trilogy, The Lord of the Rings. It seems an opportune time to take a look at Tolkien’s use of language to set the tone and environment of Middle-earth, particularly his use of Old English.

Tolkien was not simply a writer of fantasy stories. He had a day job as a professor of philology at Merton College, Oxford. He was one of the world’s foremost experts on Old English and his 1936 essay, Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics, revolutionized the teaching and study of Anglo-Saxon literature, treating the poem as a work of literature for the first time, rather than just a historical artifact. The Middle-earth stories about hobbits and wizards were simply a hobby and a way to amuse his children.

One of the things that inspired Tolkien was what he perceived to be a lack of English-language mythology. The tales and stories of the ancient Britons were never written down and were wiped out by the Anglo-Saxons. Similarly, most of the tales of the Anglo-Saxons were lost with the Norman Conquest. Even Beowulf, although written in Old English, is about a Geatish hero, from what is now Sweden, who travels to what is now Denmark to fight the monster Grendel. In writing The Lord of the Rings, and the accompanying books, The Hobbit and The Silmarillion, Tolkien was attempting, in part, to create a mythology for England, and it made sense to use Old English associations as the means to link his tales with Britain.

Tolkien does this in several ways. He resurrects dead or little-used Old English words and uses them in his books, usually as names but also as terms for items of cultural significance, like smial and mathom. He also uses words that are not lost, but perhaps a bit archaic or evocative of older days in England, words like barrow or farthing. And in one case he even uses Old English in its entirety to represent the speech of one of the peoples of Middle-earth, the Rohirrim.

Geography of Middle-earth
Throughout his books, Tolkien uses Old English words, or words coined from Old English roots, as names for places, people, and things in Middle-earth. Even the name of his world itself, Middle-earth, is taken from the Old English midden-erd. As Tolkien wrote in a 1956 letter “Middle-earth is not an imaginary world. The name is the modern form (appearing in the 13th century and still in use) of midden-erd < middel-erd, an ancient name for the oikoumenē, the abiding place of Men, the objectively real world, in use specifically opposed to imaginary worlds (as Fairyland) or unseen worlds (as Heaven or Hell)." Tolkien is not the first modern writer to use the word. It has been in continual, if rare, use since Old English; Shakespeare, for example, uses middle earth in The Merry Wives of Windsor and Hawthorne uses it in The Marble Faun.

Tolkien takes his name for the hobbits’ homeland, The Shire, from scír, an Anglo-Saxon term for an administrative district. The word is still in general use, found chiefly as a general term for district or in place names, such as Yorkshire. The hobbits’ Shire is divided into four districts, which Tolkien calls Farthings. That word is from the Old English féorðing or féorða, meaning a fourth. In the real world, the word is best known for its use to denote a quarter of a monetary denomination or other measure, especially a quarter of a penny. One particular low, wet region in Eastfarthing is called the Marish, a word from the Anglo-Norman mareis, meaning swamp. Again, this is not a unique Tolkien usage; the word has been in occasional usage since the 14th century. Spenser uses it in the Faerie Queene, as does Tennyson in Dying Swan.

Old English terms are not just used by Tolkien to evoke pleasant images of days gone by in England. He also uses the Anglo-Saxon for the names of darker places. In The Lord of the Rings, the hero, a hobbit named Frodo, must journey to Mordor, land of Sauron, the Dark Lord, to destroy a magical ring. The name Mordor bears a striking resemblance to the Old English morðor, or murder, a similarity that could not have been lost on Tolkien. Also, another evil-doer, the wizard Saruman dwells in the fortress of Isengard, Old English for iron court, from the isen (iron) + gard (enclosure). At the center of Isengard is the tower of Orthanc, an Old English word meaning contrivance, skill, intelligence, or as Tolkien glosses it, cunning mind.

Placenames from the languages of some of Tolkien’s fantastic creatures also sometimes come from Old English. The underground Dwarfish city of Dwarrowdelf is from dweorh (dwarf) + gedelf (mine, pit). Derndingle, the meeting place of the giant Ents, means secret valley and is, in part, from Old English, dyrne (secret) + dingle (valley, of unknown origin)

Characters and Creatures of Middle-earth
Tolkien occasionally dips into Old English for the names of characters. He does this most often with the names of the people of Rohan (see The Language of Rohan, below), but with others as well. The protagonist of The Lord of the Rings, a hobbit named Frodo, takes his name from the Old English fród, meaning wise. Nor did Tolkien invent the name of the wizard Gandalf. That name appears throughout Norse mythology. The meaning, magical, gaunt, or wand elf, depends on which Germanic language you take it from. The evil wizard Saruman’s name is also from Old English, searu (cunning) + man, as is the name of another wizard, Radagast, from rad (skillful) + gast (spirit). The Hobbit has a character, a man who can change into a bear at will. His name is Beorn, an Old English word for warrior or hero. And the monstrous spider, Shelob, takes her name from she + the Old English lobbe (spider).

Other dark creatures go by Old English names. Most famous perhaps is orc. Tolkien adopted the word, which has been in occasional use in its current form since the late 16th century, as the name for the race of evil minions of the Dark Lord. The ultimate origin is somewhat vague, with several candidates presenting themselves. It may be related to Orca, the name of a genus of whales. The sense of a sea monster may have led to a more general usage. The term orcneas appears in Beowulf as a plural form of a type of monster. It may also be related to or influenced by the Latin Orcus, another name for Pluto, the god of the underworld (and the source of ogre).

Sometimes accompanying the orcs on their raids are wargs, or wolves, especially wild and vicious ones. Tolkien coined the word, basing it on the Old Norse vargr (wolf) and the Old English wearg (criminal, evil person).

Tolkien also borrows trolls from Scandinavian myth. Originally large and quite fearsome, over the centuries trolls shrunk and acquired a subterranean existence. The word was adopted into English in the 19th century. Tolkien restores the monster’s size and fearsomeness. Although a new adoption to the general English vocabulary, the word has a longer history in the dialect of the Shetland and Orkney Islands, where the term has survived (modern form: trow) as a relic of the Norse language formerly spoken there.

And in the first book of The Lord of the Rings, the hobbits encounter a barrow-wight, a supernatural being that guards the treasure in a barrow or grave. The term was actually coined in the 19th century by Andrew Lang, a writer about myths and legends. It is a compounding of barrow and wight, an Old English term for a living creature, especially a human. This sense long ago fell out of use. Wight also has had a sense of a supernatural being since c. 950. This second sense also fell out of general use, although writers, like Lang and Tolkien, have made occasional use of it over the centuries to evoke an archaic atmosphere.

barrow is a mound of earth and stones erected over a grave. Originally from an Old English word for mountain, that sense has long passed out of the language, except in the names of particular hills. The term survived as a local term for a grave mound in the Southwest of England. It since has enjoyed a revival as an archeological term. Tolkien uses it the sense of a grave mound, especially those found just outside the borders of the Shire.

Tolkien, however, doesn’t restrict Old English to the names of evil races of creatures. Ents, kindly giant tree-creatures likely get their name from Eoten, an Old English word for giant. And the Woses, or wild men of the forest, are from the Old English wudewásawudu (wood) + *wása (unknown)

Things of Middle-earth
Tolkien also resurrects some Old English words to give names to things found in Middle-earth. One such example is mathom. It is an Old English word, meaning a treasure or something valuable, that fell out of use in 13th century. Tolkien revived it with a new sense, that of a hobbit’s trinket or useless heirloom. Tolkien also revived mathom-house, which had meant a treasury in Old English, but in Tolkien’s world becomes a museum stuffed with old curiosities.

Another such hobbit word is smial. Tolkien uses it as a term for a hobbit’s hole, especially a large and grand one. It is based on the Old English smygel, or burrow. And living in the Great Smials is the Thain of the Shire. Thane is an Old English word for a warrior who is charged with ruling lands of the king. Tolkien uses it to denote the leader of the hobbits in the Shire.

Kingsfoil is the name of a plant with healing powers, coined by Tolkien. The original sense of foil, which is from the Old French, is the leaf of a plant. This sense has long been obsolete in English, giving way to the modern sense of metal hammered very thin, like a leaf. But Tolkien used the original sense when he names this plant, literally king’s leaf. He also uses the Old English athel, or noble, to form the Elvish name for the plant, athelas.

The Language of Rohan
Tolkien did more than simply resurrect Old English words as names of places and things in Middle-earth. He actually used the language to represent the language of one of the peoples of Middle-earth, the Rohirrim (the word Rohirrim is a Tolkien coinage, formed from roots in the fictional Elvish languages he created). Of course, most of the dialogue spoken by the people of Rohan is in modern English, but throughout the books Tolkien gives us snippets of Rohirric/Old English.

Rohan, in Tolkien’s tales, is a land of men, peopled by a fair-haired, Nordic-like race known for their excellence as horsemen. When it comes to representing their speech, Tolkien simply uses Old English. Throughout the explanatory material and the appendices to Lord of the Rings, Tolkien uses the conceit that he translated the material from ancient languages and that these are actual myths and legends, not stories of his own creation. In using Old English to represent Rohirric, Tolkien was choosing a language that had analogous relationship to modern English as Rohirric had to Hobbitish. He writes, “the language of Rohan I have accordingly made to resemble ancient English. The language of Rohan was related (more distantly) to the Common Speech, and (very closely) to the former tongue of the northern Hobbits, and was in comparison with the [Common Speech] archaic. In the Red Book it is noted in several places that when Hobbits heard the speech of Rohan they recognized many words and felt the language to be akin to their own, so that it seemed absurd to leave the recorded names and words of the Rohirrim in a wholly alien style.”

Tolkien goes on to note, “this linguistic procedure does not imply that the Rohirrim closely resembled the ancient English otherwise, in culture or art, in weapons or modes of warfare, except in a general way due to their circumstances: a simpler and more primitive people living in contact with a higher and more venerable culture, and occupying lands that had once been part of its domain.”

The Rohirrim refer to themselves as the Eorlingas, or in Old English “the people of Eorl,” Eorl being the first king of Rohan. Their name for hobbits is holbytla, or hole-builder, from the Old English hol (hole) + *byldan (to build).

The names of the people of Rohan, for one thing, are all derived from Old English words. The king of Rohan is Théoden, which means king in Old English. His nephew and heir is Éomer, a name that also appears in Beowulf and means renowned rider, and Théoden’s niece is Éowyn, or joyful rider. His counselor, who is secretly in league with the evil wizard Saruman is named Gríma, or mask. Gríma gives the wizard Gandalf the nickname, Láthspell, or lað (hateful) + spell (message), because Gandalf always seems to appear when things are at their darkest. And the Rohirrim give the hobbit Merry, who befriends Théoden, the name of Holdwine, from hold (loyal) + wine (friend).

The Rohirrim are renowned horsemen and they treat their horses almost as well as they do their children. The horses’ names in the books are also from Old English. The most famous, Shadowfax, is somewhat updated for the modern reader. It is from sceadu (dusky, shadowy) + feax (hair). Another horse is named Arod, the Old English word for swift or quick and another is Hasufel, or hasu (gray) + fell (skin). And the name for the royal horses of Rohan is Mearas, from the Old English mearh, or horse (and the etyma of the modern word mare). As warriors, the Rohirrim fight on horseback, organized in troops called éoreds, which is an Old English word for a mounted company or legion.

Place names in Rohan are also from Old English. The capital is Edoras, or the courts, and the king’s hall is Meduseld, or mead-hall. Districts in Rohan are Eastemnet and Westemnet, from the Old English emnet meaning plain or level ground. These two districts are also known as the wold, or open country, plain. It is from the Old English weald or forest (Cf. modern German Wald). The sense of forest dropped out of the English in the 15th century. The sense of open plain, stemming from the deforested plains of England, arose in the 13th century. This latter sense fell out of common use by 1600, although it remains in poetic use and in the names of places, e.g., the Cotswolds.

Others districts are Eastfold and Westfold, from folde or district, country. The entire kingdom is known as The Mark, which stems from three related, but distinct Old English roots, all carrying the sense of border, boundary, or land. The boundary sense has remained current in English, although the sense of land or country has become archaic. This latter sense is preserved, however, in its modern German cognate.

Tolkien gives us very few actual sentences in Rohirric/Old English. One that he does is a greeting Éomer gives to the king, Westu Théoden hál, This, substituting the appropriate name, is a traditional Old English greeting meaning Hail, Théoden, or literally “you be healthy, Théoden.” Although Tolkien modifies the spelling a bit, in Old English the first words would actually be “Waes thu.” Similarly, Éowyn bids good-bye to Théoden with Ferthu Théoden hál, or “farewell, Théoden,” literally “go with health, Théoden”

Other Old English words appear individually in the speech of characters, giving the reader a sense of their language and mythos. Éowyn calls the Lord of the Nazgul, a wraith-like servant of Sauron, the Dark Lord, a dwimmerlaik. The word, demerlayk, meaning magic or occult, appears in Middle English and is from the Old English roots dweomer (illusion, phantasm) + -lác (suffix of action or condition). Dweomer appears again in the Rohirric name for the Elvish forest of Lothlórien, Dwimordenedweomer + denu (valley)

The Rohirrim call the fortress of Minas Tirith Mundburg, from the Old English mund (protection) + burð (fortified town). The flower that grows on their gravesites is Simbelmynë, from symble (always) + mynd (remembrance). And a series of ancient statues depicting a race of squat, primitive men are called the Púkel-men, from the Old English púcel (goblin) + men.

So, here we have an example of a writer who is philologically savvy and who uses this knowledge to good effect. Tolkien went further than simply reusing Old English words. He even invented several languages (or at least some basic grammar and a few hundred vocabulary words) for his creations to speak. But the Old English usages are especially effective. They seem vaguely familiar and evoke images of ages past, when at least the possibility of magical creatures seemed real.

Word of the Month: Weapon of Mass Destruction

1 December 2002

The word (actually it is a noun phrase) of the month is:

Weapon of Mass Destructionn., a nuclear, biological, or chemical weapon. Sometimes radiological weapons are included in the definition. Also WMD. In use since at least 1937. Pre-1945 uses of the term referred to conventional weapons of great destructive power, such as the bombing of cities by aircraft, and chemical weapons.

Weapons of mass destruction have been all over the news lately. The United States is gearing up for war in Iraq because Saddam Hussein continues to develop them. The United Nations has sent inspectors to Iraq to ensure that he does not, in fact, possess such weapons. And in the midst of this, North Korea announces that it has a nuclear weapons program, in violation of agreements it has entered into with other nations.

Presented here are a number of terms associated with weapons of mass destruction.

ABMn., abbreviation for Anti-Ballistic Missile, a missile designed to shoot down other missiles. It is often used in reference to the 1972 ABM Treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union that severely restricted development and deployment of ABM systems. Since 1963.

A-Bombn., nuclear weapon, especially. a fission-only weapon. It is an abbreviation for Atomic bomb. From 1945.

Alpha Radiationn., a type of nuclear radiation consisting of a helium nucleus (2 protons and 2 neutrons) stripped of its electrons. Alpha particles are the most damaging of the types of ionizing radiation to the human body, but the least dangerous as they cannot penetrate the skin and only travel a few centimeters through the air. Generally, alpha radiation is only dangerous when the radioactive substance is swallowed or inhaled. The term was coined by Ernest Rutherford in 1899.

Anthraxn., disease, primarily of sheep and cattle but that can infect humans, caused by Bacillus anthracis. It is often considered as a biological warfare agent, although it is readily treatable with common antibiotics. From the Latin, after the Greek word for coal, so-called because of the black pustules that develop on the skin of those infected. It has been in use since 1398 in the sense of any dark, malignant pustule; since 1876 in the sense of the specific disease caused by B. anthracis.

Beta Radiationn., a type of nuclear radiation consisting of an electron. Beta particles have greater penetrating power than alpha particles, but are less damaging to living tissue. The term was coined in 1899 by Ernest Rutherford.

Binary Weaponn., a type of chemical weapon consisting of two, less-toxic chemicals that are mixed to produced the chemical agent. Contrary to popular conception, binary weapons are not more effective than the less sophisticated unitary weapons, but they are safer to store, handle, and dispose of. From at least 1973.

Biological Weaponn., a device that uses pathogens or toxins to cause harm to people, plants, or animals; a pathogen or toxin intended for such use. From 1946. Biologic weapon appears as early as 1933. Bacteriological weapon is used in the same sense from 1925.

Chemical Weaponn., a device that uses toxic chemicals to cause harm to people, animals, or equipment; a chemical agent intended for such use. From 1920.

Conventional Weaponn., any weapon other than a nuclear, biological, chemical, or radiological weapon.

Dirty Bombn., 1) a nuclear weapon specifically designed to maximize the release of long-lived radioactive isotopes (fallout), 2) a radiological weapon. From 1961 in the first sense, 1993 in the second.

Dual-Useadj., used to describe equipment and material that can be used to produce weapons of mass destruction but which also has legitimate, peaceful uses. Since 1989.

Ebolan., a filovirus that causes an acute and lethal hemorrhagic fever. Ebola is sometimes speculated upon as a potential biological agent, although no one has been reported as having weaponized it. Since 1977. The virus takes its the name of the Ebola River in Zaire, site of a 1976 outbreak. The Soviets successfully weaponized the related Marburg virus, named for Marburg, Germany, the location of a 1967 outbreak in a laboratory.

Enrichv., to increase the percentage of Uranium-235 in a sample of uranium ore. Naturally occurring uranium is over 99% Uranium-238, which is not fissionable. To use uranium as a fuel or in a weapon, the percentage of fissionable U-235 must be increased to the point where a nuclear reaction can be sustained. Low-enriched uranium is used in most commercial reactors. Highly enriched uranium is used in naval reactors and some specialized facilities. Very highly enriched uranium is weapons grade (see below). From 1945.

Falloutn., radioactive debris from a nuclear detonation that is then deposited over a large area downwind of ground zero. From 1950.

Gamma Radiationn., a type of nuclear radiation consisting of electromagnetic emissions with a very short wavelength. Gamma rays have greater penetrating power than alpha or beta particles, but are less damaging. Term coined in 1903 by Ernest Rutherford.

Ground Zeron., the point on the earth’s surface at or, in the case of an airburst, directly below the detonation of a nuclear weapon (1946); the site in lower Manhattan that had been occupied by the World Trade Center towers that were destroyed on 11 September 2001.

H-Bombn., a thermonuclear weapon. It is an abbreviation for hydrogen bomb. From 1950.

IAEAn., Abbreviation for International Atomic Energy Agency. The U.N. organization, headquartered in Vienna, responsible for nuclear safeguards under the 1970 Non-Proliferation Treaty and for nuclear weapons inspections in Iraq. From 1956.

ICBMn., Abbreviation for Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile. An ICBM is a missile with global range, usually armed with a nuclear warhead. From 1955.

MIRVn., Abbreviation for Multiple Independently targetable Reentry VehiclesMIRVs are multiple warheads carried by a missile that are capable of striking different targets. From 1967. MIRV is also used as a verb meaning to arm a missile with such warheads.

Mustardn., dichlorodiethylsulphide, a colorless to pale yellow, oily liquid used as a chemical warfare agent. Mustard is a vesicant, causing severe chemical burns on the skin and eyes and, if the aerosol is inhaled, in the lungs. It is so called because of its color and garlicky smell. Mustard was first used by the German army at Ypres in 1917. It is also known as Yperite from Ypres and as Yellow Cross (German, WWI) and H (US), from the markings used on shell casings containing the agent.

NBCadj., US military abbreviation for Nuclear, Biological, & Chemical.

Nerve Agentn., a class of chemical weapons. Cholinesterase inhibitors, nerve agents block the action of that enzyme at nerve synapses, resulting in paralysis of the parasympathetic nervous system and eventual death through suffocation. The Germans first developed nerve agents before and during WWII. The term nerve gas has been in use since 1940, although technically none of them are gases.

Neutron Bombn, nuclear weapon designed to minimize blast effects while maximizing emission of neutrons. The intent of the American weapons designers was to irradiate invading Soviet tank crews while minimizing collateral damage to the West German countryside. This type of nuclear weapon was officially designated as an Enhanced Radiation Weapon. From 1960; enhanced radiation from 1976.

Nuclear Weaponn., a weapon that produces its destructive power through the rapid and uncontrolled release of energy from the fission or fusion of atomic nuclei. From 1945.

OPCWn., Abbreviation for Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the international organization, headquartered in The Hague, charged with overseeing implementation of the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention.

Plaguen., disease caused by Yersinia pestis, also known as bubonic or pneumonic plague. The word is also used more generally for any lethal, communicable disease, a pestilence. Plague is often considered as a potential biological warfare agent, although it is readily treatable with common antibiotics. From the Old French plage, meaning a blow, stroke, or wound. This is also the original English sense, especially a blow of divine retribution, as in the ten plagues of Egypt. Plague, meaning divine retribution, has been In English since 1382, the pestilence sense since 1548, and used for the specific disease since 1601.

Plutoniumn., a transuranic, radioactive metal that is often used as the fissionable material in nuclear weapons. The name was coined in 1942 by its discoverer, Glenn Seaborg. It is named after the planet; neptunium and plutonium follow uranium on the periodic table, just as the planets Neptune and Pluto follow Uranus in the solar system.

Proliferationn., the increase in the number of states possessing nuclear weapons. From 1965.  Also in use is nonproliferation, the prevention of such an increase, especially by diplomatic means or in context of the 1968 Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), and counterproliferation, the prevention of such an increase through the threat or use of force (1993). Proliferation is also sometimes called as horizontal proliferation, to distinguish it from vertical proliferation the increase in size and sophistication of arsenals in existing nuclear weapon states (1989).

Radiationn., particles or electromagnetic energy emitted as the result of nuclear decay, fission, or fusion. From the Latin. In use since 1570 to denote visible light emitted by a radiant body, since 1896 in the nuclear sense.

Radiological Weaponn., a conventional bomb jacketed with radioactive material with the intent that the material would be spread by the detonation, creating a continuing health risk and material disposal problem.

Ricinn., toxin found in castor beans. Ricin has been used as a biological agent in assassination attempts. Since 1896; from plant’s Latin nomenclature, Ricinus communis.

Sarinn., Isopropoxy-methyl-phosphoryl-flouride, a nerve agent. In 1945, the Allies gave it its military nomenclature of GB (G = Germany, B = second nerve agent). The name sarin is from a German acronym coined in 1938 by Gerhard Schrader after the names of individuals involved in the discovery: Schrader, Ambros, Rüdriger, and van der Linde. Iraq used sarin in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War. The Japanese cult Aum Shinrikyo used an impure form of the agent in its 1995 attack on the Tokyo subway.

Smallpoxn., disease caused by Variola major. The name is from the small size of the pustules that form on the skin. From 1518. The disease was eradicated in 1980. Samples of the virus were legally retained in the United States and Russia and probably illegally at other locations. The Soviet Union illegally weaponized smallpox following its eradication.

Somann., Pinacoloxy-methyl-phosphoryl-fluoride, a nerve agent. The name comes from its German designation, coined in 1944. The significance of the name soman has been lost—unlike the other nerve agents, all Nazi documentation on soman fell into Soviet hands at the war’s end. The Allied military designation was GD (not GC, as that was an existing medical designation for gonorrhea).

Special Weaponn., US military euphemism for a nuclear weapon.

Tabunn., Ethyl N,N-dimethyl phosphoramicocyanidate, a chemical nerve agent. The first nerve agent, its discoverer, Gerhard Schrader, coined the name in 1937, allegedly as a meaningless code name. Allied military designation was GA. Iraq used tabun in its war with Iran.

Thermonuclearadj., denoting a nuclear fusion reaction, one where hydrogen nuclei fuse into helium, releasing energy, as in a hydrogen bomb. The name comes from the large amounts of heat required to initiate the fusion reaction. From 1938 in reference to stars; 1953 for weapons.

Toxinn., a naturally occurring toxic substance, whether produced by natural means or synthesized in a laboratory. Toxins are classified as biological weapons, but have more in common with chemical weapons than with pathogens. The term has been In use since 1886.

Uraniumn., a chemical element, the heaviest found in nature. Uranium-235 is used as a nuclear fuel and weapons material. Named after the planet Uranus by the element’s discoverer, Martin Heinrich Klaproth, c. 1790.

VXn., O-ethyl S-2-diisopropylaminoethyl methylphosphonothiolate, a chemical nerve agent. VX was developed by the United States in 1952, based on discoveries made by the British. VX is heavier and less volatile than the G-agents. The name was coined in 1955, allegedly V = venomous and presumably the X = experimental. VX was the only V-series nerve agent developed (the Soviet VR-55 is a VX analog).

Weaponizev., to make into a weapon, particularly in reference to nuclear, chemical, or biological capability. The verb is also used in the sense of to populate with weapons, as in “to weaponize outer space.” Since at least 1993.

Weapons Gradeadj., applied to fissile material suitable for making nuclear weapons. From 1961. Journalists in 2001-02 have used it for biological agents that have been specially prepared for easy dissemination, although this is not a usage in the biological weapons community. It is sometimes jocularly used to mean something pungent or hot, as in weapons-grade salsa.

Yieldn., the explosive power of a nuclear weapon, usually expressed in kilotons, or the thousands of tons of TNT equivalent. It is sometimes expressed in megatons, or millions of tons of TNT equivalent. The Hiroshima bomb had a yield of about 12 kilotons. A modern strategic warhead would have something like 300 kilotons in yield; a modern tactical weapon would have something around one kiloton.

American Dialect: New York Speak

1 November 2002

One of the most distinctive dialects in the United States is that found in New York City. Often called Brooklynese (a misnomer as the dialect is common to all five boroughs, plus parts of New Jersey and Connecticut, and not just Brooklyn), the dialect has been introduced to the world via Hollywood, from the Bowery Boys to the Sopranos.

New York is the largest and most cosmopolitan city in the country. Not everyone there speaks with the New York dialect. And unlike the dialects of other regions, like Boston or the South, the New York dialect is class-based. The higher you are on the social ladder, the less likely you are to sound like a New Yorker.

In the 1966, linguist William Labov conducted a classic study of the pronunciation of the letter R in New York department stores. Like their Boston compatriots, New Yorkers tend to drop the letter R; it is a non-rhotic dialect. Labov went to three different department stores and conducted undercover “interviews” with employees, counting the number of Rs in the pronunciation of phrases like “fourth floor.” He found the most Rs at upscale Saks. Macy’s, a mid-range store, had fewer and the discount Klein’s had the least. He also discovered that in all three stores, stock boys were more likely to omit the R than managers, and sales clerks fell between the two extremes. When Labov asked them to repeat themselves, all the employees used more Rs the second time around, when they were speaking more carefully.

This class difference in speech means that New Yorkers are often a bit embarrassed to be caught speaking their own dialect. They don’t celebrate their pronunciation as do the Bostonians, Baltimoreans, or Southerners.

So what makes New York speech so distinctive?

Non-Rhotic Dialect
We’ve mentioned that New York speech is a non-rhotic dialect. Much like the speech of New England or the South, New York drops the letter R after a vowel, hence the Yawk in Noo Yawk and source is pronounced as sauce. And like New England (but unlike the South), New Yorkers retain the R at the end of words if the next word begins with a vowel.

And like New Englanders, New Yorkers will actually insert an R at the end of words if the next word begins with a vowel. So I saw it becomes I sawr it, and idea often becomes ideer.

Closed Vowels
Another pronunciation difference is that New Yorkers pronounce the vowel sounds in words like walktalk, and dog with the mouth more closed than most other Americans do. Most Americans will pronounce these vowel sounds as “ah,” as if a doctor were examining their throats. New Yorkers say them like the vowel in the first syllable of coffee.

Irish Influences
Three pronunciation habits made their way into New York talk at the turn of the 20th century. The first is replacing an S sound with SH. Office becomes offish and serious becomes sherious.

The second is the substitution of T or D for TH. These and those becomes dese and dose, and thirty-third street becomes tuh-eety tuh-id street.

The third is often represented as toity-toid street, but this is not quite accurate. Rather, the substitution should be an UH-EE sound for ER and vice versa. Oil becomes erlboil becomes buh-il, and girl becomes guh-ill.

All three of these Irish borrowings are fading from the speech.

Dropped H
New Yorkers also drop the H at the start of some words. Huge becomes yuge and we’re not humans, we’re yumans.

Central Gs and Ts
New Yorkers also do interesting things with Gs and Ts in the middle of words. They distinctly pronounce the Gs in words like Long Island and finger. And the often reduce the T in two-syllable words like bottle or settle to a glottal stop.

NYC Words and Phrases
Aikiesinterj., child’s call laying claim on something, dibs. Etymology unknown, perhaps from an English dialectical term. In NYC use since at least 1934. Often no aikies.

Brownstoneadj. and n., a residential building, originally a single-family dwelling for the wealthy, now usually converted into several apartments. From the stone used in the façade. Adjectival use since 1858. As a noun since the 1940s.

Bunk intov.phr., to accidentally meet someone. Alteration of bump into. From 1942.

Ditzyadj., scatterbrained, irresponsible, absent-minded. From c. 1976. Probably a variation on dizzy. Originally a NYC term, this has gained wider currency.

Egg creamn., drink made from seltzer, chocolate syrup, and milk (there are no eggs or cream in an egg cream). From 1906. Evidently, early recipes for egg creams did mix egg and cream with the syrup, but by the 1960s this had been abandoned in favor of plain chocolate syrup.

Elevator apartmentn., apartment in a building with an elevator (1912). Cf. walk-up apartment.

Floor-throughn., apartment taking up an entire floor of a, usually small, apartment building (1964).

Fuhgeddaboutitinterj., denial of possibility, NYC equivalent of no way, Jose. From at least 1985.

Heron., a submarine sandwich. From 1947. Probably from the idea that it was a “heroic” deed to eat an entire sandwich. Often attributed to New York restaurant critic Clementine Paddleford, but there is no evidence that she ever used the term. An alternate theory is that it is an alteration of the Greek gyros, but this is unlikely. Gyros is a later addition to English and no one would mistake a gyros for a sub.

Hey, I’m walkin’ hereinterj., used when bumping into someone, the NYC equivalent of “excuse me.”

Mookn., a low-life, a disreputable person, a fool. From 1930, of unknown origin. This word is made famous by its use in many police dramas.

On lineadv., in the queue. Millions of Americans go on line to access the internet, but they wait in line. Except in New York, where you wait on line. From at least 1958.

Regular coffeen., coffee with milk and sugar. Elsewhere in the US, regular coffee is coffee with caffeine. Witness this exchange on the TV show Law & Order:

Waitress: “What would you like?”
Detective Briscoe: “A regular coffee.”
Waitress: “How would you like it?”
Briscoe: “Regular.”

Youse guysn., you, form of address. Youse guys is to New York what Y’all is in the South.

New Jersey Words and Phases
Bennien., summer visitor to the Jersey shore. Found in Monmouth and Ocean counties. From c. 1977. Origin unknown. Several theories prevail. Possibly from the name Benny, a common name among Jewish families in NYC that visited the shore. Possibly from someone who wants the “beneficial rays of the sun.”

Jersey barriern., temporary concrete barrier used on highways. Not so much a New Jersey-specific term, but so called because jersey barriers were an invention of the state highway department in the 1950s.

Jughandlen., a right hand exit lane at a highway intersection that curves back to cross the original road at a right angle, facilitating a left turn. From 1961. So called because of the shape.

Shoren., the beach, in particular the New Jersey shore, from Sandy Hook to Cape May. New Yorkers go down the Shore (no to) on summer weekends.