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-
- Howta Rackanize Ameraican Slurvian
-
- Language lovers have long bewailed the sad state of pronunciation and
- articulation in the United States. Both in sorrow and in anger, speakers
- afflicted with sensitive ears wince at such mumblings as guvmint for government
- and assessories for accessaories.
-
- Indeed, everywhere we turn we are assaulted by a slew of slurrings. We
- meet people who hafta, oughta or are gonna do something or who shoulda, woulda
- or coulda done it. We hear how they love "drinkin outa bahls" (drinking out of
- bottles) or how they've "jus been Nittly"(just been in Italy).
- Here's a typically American exchange:
-
- "Jeet jet?"
- "No, jew?"
- "Sgo."
-
- Translation: "Did you eat yet?" "No, did you?" "Let's go."
-
- In a 1949 New Yorker article, John Davenport labeled this kind of
- sublanguage with the delightfully appropriate name, "Slurvian." Taking
- Davenport's lead, H. Alan Wycherley, in Word Study, distinguished between the
- pure and impure uses of Slurvian. Impure Slurvian produces nonsense sounds,
- such as those I have listed above. But Slurvian in its purest form
- mispronounces English words into OTHER English words.
-
- To help you to translate Slurvian into English and to perserve the growing
- canon of American non-enunciation, I offer a grotesque glossary of pure
- Slurvian:
-
- Ye Olde Glossary
- of the
- American Slurvian Language
-
- -from Anguished English by Richard Lederer
-
- Antidote: A story. "I love your antidote about the time you made dinner for
- the boss.
-
- Bar: To take temporarily. "May I bar your eraser?"
-
- Calvary: A mobile army unit. "At the last minute, the wagon train was saved
- by the calvary.
-
- Dense: A tooth expert. "Yuck! I have a dense appointment today."
-
- Forced: A large cluster of trees. "Only you can prevent forced fires."
-
- Formally: earlier. "Today, she's a millionaire, but formally she tried to make
- a living by being an English teacher.
-
- Girl: An article of feminine underclothing. "She had to work hard to get her
- girl on."
-
- Granite: conceded. "Too many people take the good life for granite."
-
- Intensive: Part of an idiom, as in "for all intensive purposes,"rather than the
- correct "for all intents and purposes."
-
- Lays: The opposite of genmen. "Lays and genmen,..."
-
- Less: Contraction of let us. "Less lean more about Slurvian."
-
-
-
-
- Lining: Electrical flash of light. "We abandonded our picnic when we heard
- the thunder and saw the lining."
-
- Mayan: Possessive pronoun. "What's yours is mayan and what's mayan is
- mayan."
-
- Mere: A relecting glass. "Mere, mere on the wall..."
-
- Mill: Between the beginning and the end. "A table stood in the mill of the
- room."
-
- Mince: Unit of time (60 sec.). "I'll be back in a few mince."
-
- Money: Second day of the week. "I'll be back next Money."
-
- Neck Store: Adjacent "I'm in love with the girl neck store."
-
- Nigh: Opposite of day "She woke up screaming in the middle of the nigh."
-
- Of: Have "I could of danced all night..."
-
- Pain: Giving money "I'm tired of pain these high prices."
-
- Pal: To locomote a craft on water. "It's your turn to pal the canoe."
-
- Paramour: A modern grass cutting instrument "Less try out the new paramour on
- the lawn."
-
- Pitcher: An image or representation "As soon as we get the pitcher framed,
- we'll hang it above the sofa."
-
- Please: Officer(s) of the law. "My house was robbed, call the please."
-
- Sunny: The first day of the week. "When Sunny comes, can Money be far
- behind?"
-
- Then: A conjunction "I like Sunny better then Money."
-
- Torment: A competition "Mabel and me have entered the bridge torment."
-
- Whore: Inspiring terror "I love getting scared out of my pants by whore
- films."
-
- Win: Movements of air "He was awakened in the mill of the nigh by flashes
- of lining and gusts of win."
-
- Winner: The cold season of the year "Many birds fly south for the winner."
- Slurvophobes unite!
-
-