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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!ox-prg!oxuniv!wilcox
- From: wilcox@vax.oxford.ac.uk
- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Subject: Re: Sound-Bite?
- Message-ID: <1992Jul30.134631.7921@vax.oxford.ac.uk>
- Date: 30 Jul 92 12:46:31 GMT
- References: <9207292154.AA04952@ha06.eng.ua.edu>
- Organization: Oxford University VAXcluster
- Lines: 30
-
- In article <9207292154.AA04952@ha06.eng.ua.edu>, bkannan@ha06.eng.ua.edu (Balaji Kannan) writes:
- >
- >
- > Could someone explain what a sound-bite is?
-
- A sound-bite is a ten-second (or so) pithy aphorism, for presentation on the
- evening news.
-
- > What is its origin?
- >
- According to some TV networks, people have a fifteen-second attention span.
- Politicians like their audience to listen o them, hence the sound-bite.
-
- > Who is a policy-wonk?
-
- That's an Americanism. I've never heard it!
-
- > Does ad-libbing mean just extempore speech or more than that?
- >
- Just that.
-
- > How did these originate?
- >
- The verb "to ad-lib" comes from the adverbial phrase "ad libitum", meaning "at
- liberty".
-
- --
-
- Stephen Wilcox | Remember what happened to the dinosaurs!
- wilcox@maths.oxford.ac.uk | I did---and look what happened to me.
-