The New York Times Magazine 1993 WIlliam Safire - Abstracts

The New York Times Magazine 1993 WIlliam Safire
TitleSubjectAuthors
1993 Bloopie Awards. (mistakes in advertising)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
A heads up on fulsome. (On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Bungee jumping. (includes related information)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Dog's breakfast. (On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Ethnic cleansing. (includes related information)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Fashionable words. (words applying to trendy fashion) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Fly me to the zone. (no-fly zone)(includes related information) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Get a life! (includes related information) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Health care provider, heal thyself. (On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Inaugural nitpicks. (Bill Clinton's inaugural address; includes related information)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
In the deep heart's core. (political jargon; includes related information)(On Language)General interestWilliam Safire
Jericho, trumpets, walls, etc. (grammatical criticism of Clinton's speech on Middle East peace) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Leaping the rhetorical gap. (Clinton administration's foreign relations terminology) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Linguaclip. (acronyms) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Mangled metaphors. (politicians' and executives' misuse of language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Off of. (On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
REGO is a MEGO. (changing spelling of the English language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Save our zoo from language predators. (includes related article on 'antidisestablishmentarianism')(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Sic 'em. (On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Slur patrol. (words that originate as ethnic slurs) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Smilin' thru? (On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Spectacular hair day. (anecdotes on the use of words and their intended meanings) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Stiffed again. (political expressions) (includes related information) (On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Stormy whether - or not? (On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Stud muffin's buzz-kill. (college slang)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
The man in the big white jail. (presidential isolation)(includes related article) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
There are those who say. (includes related information)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Tough sell. (Includes related information)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Vetter vets 'vet.' (includes related information)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
What's so funny about bananas? (includes related information)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Who's got clout. (in the Clinton Administration)(includes related information) (Cover Story)General interestWilliam Safire
Woe is not me. (analysis of phrase "woe is me") (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Words out in the cold. (words left out of third edition of American Heritage Dictionary; includes related articles)(On Language) (Column)General interestWilliam Safire
This website is not affiliated with document authors or copyright owners. This page is provided for informational purposes only. Unintentional errors are possible.