That's What They Say

Anne Curzan, Rebecca Kruth

About

That's What They Say is a weekly segment on Michigan Public that explores our changing language. Each week University of Michigan English Professor Anne Curzan will discuss why we say what we say with Michigan Public Weekend Edition host Rebecca Kruth.

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137 episodes

TWTS: You can tuna fish, but you may not need the "fish"

Given that “tuna” is a fish, some may find it unnecessary to call out that fact out in the compound “tuna fish.” For others, “fish” may be an important distinction.

4m
Apr 01
TWTS: Prone to be prone

You can be prone to do something, whether you're lying down or not.

5m
Mar 24
TWTS: Attend as many "trainings" as you like

There’s evidence of a new peeve arising. This one is focused on “training” as a countable noun.

5m
Mar 18
TWTS: An oft overlooked double possessive

Lots of people don't like the redundancy in "irregardless." However, no one's fussy about the redundancy in a phrase like "a friend of mine."

4m
Mar 10
TWTS: An ouster for the ouster

An ouster can be an act of ousting, or it can be the one who does the ousting. But we seem to have opted for one of those meanings over the other.

5m
Mar 03
TWTS: Need something? Manifest it

At this point, we can manifest our dream future, a good grade on a exam, or even a parking spot.

4m
Feb 25
TWTS: "Curry favor" comes from a horse (of course, of course)

Currying favor has everything to do with flattery and horses, and nothing to do with food.

4m
Feb 18
TWTS: Known liars better hope their pants never literally catch fire

There’s a children’s rhyme that involves liars and pants on fire and various types of wires. Now, we can say things are “pants on fire” false.

4m
Feb 11
TWTS: If or whether you should use "if" or "whether"

If you worry about if or whether you should use "if" or "whether" in exactly this construction, you're not alone.

4m
Feb 04
TWTS: Intensifiers are so intense

It's been really dreary and so icy outside lately. It's awfully tempting to wear super cozy clothes and use lots of intensifiers.

5m
Jan 28
TWTS: Badgered badgers badger

Badgers live underground and are nocturnal, so we don't see them running around all that often. Somehow though, they're associated with a negative, annoying verb.

5m
Jan 21
TWTS: The American Dialect Society's 2023 Word of the Year

The year 2023 is officially in the record books. As part of taking stock, the members of the American Dialect Society met to consider what we've all been up to linguistically.

5m
Jan 14
TWTS: A rule about which we should be asking questions

Many of us were taught the rule that we shouldn’t end a sentence with a preposition, and honestly this is a rule we should be asking questions about.

5m
Jan 07
TWTS: Tupperware containers are plastic, but are plastic containers Tupperware?

It's undeniable that "Tupperware" has become a generic catch-all for plastic containers, regardless of shape, size, or brand. Not everyone likes this.

4m
Dec 24, 2023
TWTS: How many things can you batten?

When you stop to think about a verb like "batten," you may be struck by just how few objects it can take.

5m
Dec 17, 2023
TWTS: Chances and 'stances are both happening

Sometimes something you think is a slip or a mistake, perhaps a product of happenstance, is not that.

5m
Dec 10, 2023
TWTS: Thin as a something

Rails are thin, and so are rakes and pencils and many other things.

4m
Dec 03, 2023
TWTS: When you witness a murder ... of crows

While talking about sheep as a flock may sound unremarkable, a murder of crows sounds much more playful.

5m
Nov 25, 2023
TWTS: Gross misuse of "gross" could have gross consequences

Gross food is disgusting, but a gross error may not be. And our gross income is something else entirely.

5m
Nov 19, 2023
TWTS: Down in a pothole

Very few of us are enamored with, of, or by potholes. If you’re among the aforementioned few, we’d like a word.

5m
Nov 12, 2023
TWTS: Are all pronunciations created equal?

There’s all the variation in pronunciation that we don’t judge, and then there’s the relatively small percentage of variation out there that we do judge.

5m
Nov 05, 2023
TWTS: Whether it's luggage or baggage, it all gets lugged

We physically lug around luggage and baggage at the airport. Metaphorically though, we’re carrying around baggage.

4m
Oct 29, 2023
TWTS: The wide world of "wordies"

Wordies are the skilled birdwatchers of language.

4m
Oct 22, 2023
TWTS: A "near miss" always misses

A near miss doesn’t hit anything, as opposed to a near miss hitting something but almost or nearly missing it.

5m
Oct 15, 2023
TWTS: Sometimes "meantime" just wants to be alone

"In the meantime" is a good phrase to use when you're talking about the time between two events. But can you leave out "in the" and just say "meantime?"

5m
Oct 08, 2023
TWTS: The cow goes ... boo?

When an English-speaking U.S. or British audience is unhappy, they will often express their unhappiness by yelling “boo” as opposed to, for instance, “moo.”

5m
Oct 01, 2023
TWTS: It's both football season and football season

Depending where you live, the thought of football season might conjure images of shin guards and knee socks or helmets and shoulder pads.

5m
Sep 24, 2023
TWTS: In tennis, "love" won't let you win, but "let" might

If you’ve been watching the U.S. Open tennis tournament during the last couple of weeks, you’ve probably been hearing a lot of “love” and “let.” But where did those terms come from?

5m
Sep 10, 2023
TWTS: It's not unusual to be nonplussed over the meaning of "nonplussed"

"Nonplussed" is one of those words that historically doesn't have a particularly complicated meaning, but it's one that people frequently misuse.

4m
Sep 04, 2023
TWTS: An inquiry into "inquire" and "enquire"

When we inquire about something, one could argue that it doesn't really matter if we inquire with an "i" or enquire with an "e."

4m
Aug 27, 2023