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The Prodigal Tongue

The Love–Hate Relationship Between British and American English

Lynne Murphy

$34.99

Hardback

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English
One World
01 May 2018
Do you eat mashed potato or mashed potatoes? Are you frowning with your eyebrows or your mouth? Did you need to google mugwump when Boris Johnson laid into Jeremy Corbyn? British and American English may seem similar, but their differences abound. Contentious cultural wars are waged daily, on both sides of the Atlantic. As an American linguist based in Britain, Lynne Murphy brings a wry fish-out-of-water wit and a keen sociological eye to the evolution of these two strands of the same language and how respective speakers perceive one another. In America there is a malady where sufferers are encumbered by a verbal inferiority complex, while on this side of the pond some Brits are gripped by a delusional paranoia that their English is under attack. Murphy puts the mythologies of British and American English to the test, revealing some surprises about how our shared language really works.
By:  
Imprint:   One World
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 135mm,  Spine: 31mm
ISBN:   9781786072696
ISBN 10:   1786072696
Pages:   368
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Lynne Murphy is a professor in linguistics at the University of Sussex. She blogs at separatedbyacommonlanguage.blogspot.com and tweets @lynneguist. A dual British/American citizen, she lives in Brighton.

Reviews for The Prodigal Tongue: The Love–Hate Relationship Between British and American English

`[Murphy's] delivery is sparkling, her approach mischievous, her material brightened by the unexpected...a potpourri of enchanting, counterintuitive surprises...The Prodigal Tongue is playful, funny, smart and often humbling...Murphy's prose is beguiling, and sprinkled with sprightly quotations...before the apocalypse, you could do worse than read Lynne Murphy's delightful book.' * <i>Times Literary Supplement</i> * `Witty and erudite...what lifts The Prodigal Tongue is Murphy's deep learning, lightly worn, in linguistics and linguistic history...fascinating.' * <i>Financial Times</i> * `A fun, practical and intelligent book which reminds us it's OK to say tomato both ways.' * <i>The American</i>, Books of the Year * `Murphy ranges far and wide, with much wonderful detail and colour. She is particularly good on sport, manners, class and death, and her observations on food are fascinating.' * <i>The Times</i> * `Murphy's book is pedantic, but for once the definition is positive: she gets things right, offers proof and skewers inaccuracy, and does so with wit and erudition.' * <i>Daily Telegraph</i> * `A fascinating book.' * <i>SORTED Magazine</i> * `Delightful... Murphy's great love for language radiates from these pages... Her examples are often funny and always apt...[her] book serves as an open-minded argument for tolerance and understanding.' * <i>New York Times Book Review</i> * `Entertaining and sometimes gleeful...The Prodigal Tongue is ultimately a celebration of the richness and diversity of English.' * <i>New Statesman</i> * 'Fascinating and surprising...a witty and erudite celebration of the English language.' * <i>i</i> * `Murphy has an amusing facility for zapping tired language myths... But the most striking feature of her writing is a fascination with the quirks of usage. She succeeds in her ambition to increase our enjoyment of our common language and our pride in it .' * <i>Wall Street Journal</i> * `The engaging, thoughtful and humorous approach makes for a readable and informative experience.' * <i>Irish Times</i> * `[Murphy] writes with wit and flair, wearing her erudition lightly...a swell read.' * <i>The Arts Desk</i> * `I love this book. Sassy but balanced, authoritative but fun: this is a must for anyone who fears that English is going to the American dogs.' -- Susie Dent, <i>Countdown</i>'s resident lexicographer and author of <i>Dent's Modern Tribes</i> `Finally, this emotional topic gets the hilarious, myth-demolishing and stereotype-smashing take it needed. As an American in London I couldn't stop talking about it with everyone I met.' -- Lane Greene, author of <i>You Are What You Speak</i> `The Prodigal Tongue is great fun - impeccably researched and outright funny at the same time... Murphy is one smart cookie, or should I say biscuit?' -- Patricia T. O'Conner, author of <i>Woe Is I</i> `The war of words waged between Americans and Brits has been filled with dour pedantry on both sides - which is what makes Murphy's book such a welcome and refreshing revelation... With wit and expertise, The Prodigal Tongue calls all English speakers home to a language big enough for both fries and chips, bumbershoots and brollies.' -- Kory Stamper, author of <i>Word by Word</i> `No one knows how to navigate the transatlantic language divide better than Lynne Murphy. Moving beyond facile stereotypes about British and American English, she delves into subtle linguistic nuances with wit and aplomb. The Prodigal Tongue is a wonderful reading experience for anyone interested in understanding the true nature of these two distinct nationlects .' -- Ben Zimmer, language columnist for <i>The Wall Street Journal</i> `Forget the usual bumbershoots and lifts and lorries - Lynne Murphy's book on the difference between English in America and English in England is full of much more interesting things... You'll be chuffed as nuts on every page.' -- John McWhorter, author of <i>Words On the Move</i> and <i>Talking Back, Talking Black</i>


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