The New York Times Magazine 2000 WIlliam Safire - Abstracts

The New York Times Magazine 2000 WIlliam Safire
TitleSubjectAuthors
Baldfaced; or is it a boldfaced or barefaced lie?(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Blip: financial parlance with good upside potential.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Broadband.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Carpe diem.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Census 2000.(formulating questions about household relationships in the future)General interestWilliam Safire
Chad: a lexical star is born.(On Language)General interestWilliam Safire
Come heavy; the base tenor of 'Sopranos' talk.(this and other language topics are discussed)(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Control freak: from eccentric to micromanager to dominator.(meaning of words)General interestWilliam Safire
Dash it all.(usage of dashes in writing)General interestWilliam Safire
Franken - a monstrous prefix is stalking Europe.(On Language)General interestWilliam Safire
Gifts o' gab: wordworking for the holidays.(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
How you get after a rigamarole of hooey.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Iron fist: can it be brandished in moderation?(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Iron triangle: McCain's metaphor vs. the newly steeled Bush.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Legacy; the word has been banished at the White House.(this, and other items, are discussed)(On Language)General interestWilliam Safire
Lookism: uglies of the world, unite!(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
M-commerce: does 'streaming media' give you the screaming meemies?(On Language)General interestWilliam Safire
Netenclature; a new world of names before the dots.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Netspionage; of cyberspying and e-spookspeak.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Never said it.(language, famous sayings)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
...or shut up: etymological mysteries of the 2000 campaign.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Reagan writes: the former president's recently discovered radio addresses from the 1970's show that he was more his own man than most people recognized.(Ronald Reagan)General interestWilliam Safire
Riff and raffish: of POTUS and word-swapping.(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Say what? Anachronism - you know what I'm sayin'?(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Sensual: continually sensuous or continuously sensual?(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Squeezewords: cramming it together as the wave of the future.(On Language)General interestWilliam Safire
Summitese: Putin vs. Clinton: amend, withdraw or abrogate?(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
To no avail.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
Wired: nervy world that bugs our times.(On Language)(Column)General interestWilliam Safire
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