The African svelte ingenious misspellings that make surprising sense
(2016)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: cloudLibrary

Details

PUBLISHED
[S.l.]: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016
DESCRIPTION

224 p

ISBN/ISSN
9780544800168 k6uoh89
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Inspired by his tenure at The New Yorker, this collection of comical, revelatory errors foraged from the wilds of everyday English comes with commentary by the author, illustrations by Roz Chast, and a foreword from Billy Collins. During his time at The New Yorker, Daniel Menaker happened across a superb spelling mistake: “The zebras were grazing on the African svelte." Fascinated by the idea of unintentionally meaningful spelling errors, he began to see that these gaffes neither typos nor auto-corrects are sometimes more interesting than their straight-laced counterparts. Through examples he has collected over the course of his decades-long career as an editor and writer, he brings us to a new understanding of language--how it's used, what it means, and what fun it can be. Illustrated by the inimitable Roz Chast, with a foreword from former poet laureate Billy Collins, The African Svelte offers thoughtful and intelligent exit Jesus. Menaker glances at familiar fumbles like "for all intensive purposes" and "doggy-dog world," but readers delighted by language will find themselves turning the pages with baited breath to discover fresh howlers that have them laughing off their dairy airs

Format: eBook

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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