American English Compendium
A Portable Guide to the Idiosyncrasies, Subtleties, Technical Lingo, and Nooks and Crannies of American English
Abstract
The American English Compendium is a fun way to explore the nuances of the English language—learn that a group of lions is called a pride; a group of whales, a pod; and a group of owls, a parliament. Distinguish between a quack and a shyster. Learn that “tabling a motion” in a U.S. court has an opposite meaning from the same term in England. This book picks up where other language dictionaries leave off: it includes common proverbs, a sampling of American English versus British English, popular American expressions and slang, acronyms, and varied information on everything from wildlife to currency. In this new edition, the staples have been updated and fresh chapters have been added, with information on pronunciation, oddball English words, and even some of the new Internet terminology, including Twitterspeak.
Schlagworte
Translating Americanisms Interpreting proverbs slang- Kapitel Ausklappen | EinklappenSeiten
- i–xviii Preface i–xviii
- 1–2 Introduction 1–2
- 403–408 CHAPTER 15. Neologisms 403–408
- 469–470 CHAPTER 22. Baby Talk 469–470
- 503–510 Bibliography 503–510
- 511–524 Index 511–524