here is a bit of weirdness
Sep. 12th, 2004 12:25 pmThe title Mrs, referring to a married woman, is pronounced as mis' iz, but that is just a traditional slurring of the word mistress which is what Mrs is really an abbreviation for. But the title Miss, meaning an unmarried woman, is also an abbreviation for mistress. It gets even stranger though: many women now prefer to use the title Ms which leaves undisclosed whether the person is married or not. Oddly, it too is an abbreviation for mistress.
The craziness of gender politics. :)
The craziness of gender politics. :)
no subject
Date: 2004-09-11 08:22 pm (UTC)I became curious about the word missus, which always seemed to me a made-up word, so I looked it up in the dictionary and that is where I found all that info. I love dictionaries. When I was a kid I would often sit and read the dictionary on the train to and from school. I would joke that it was a great book with a wonderful command of language, but a rather pitiful plot. :)
I still, to this day, read the dictionary, but now it is more accidental. I will look something up and my eye will be caught by something which I will also look up, and that will take me to something else, and to something further, and so on. It is a very easy way to lose hours. You may have guessed that I am one of the most easily distracted people on the planet, and you'd be right. The upside is that I spend my life in a state of perpetual interest in everything around me.
no subject
Date: 2004-09-11 08:31 pm (UTC)The prevailing mood seems one of anti-education.
no subject
Date: 2004-09-12 07:19 pm (UTC)Interesting you say that about the prevailing mood. If you are talking about big media, I agree with you. If you are talking about the general population I don't. Books sales are up and scientific literacy among ordinary folk is at an all-time high (granted this is more noticeable in Europe and Australia, as USA has lagged badly in this respect in recent decades). People are more moral, more knowledgeable, less violent, and more sensible than ever before... it is just that (mostly US-based) big media portray us as the exact reverse of that. One has to wonder why.
Are the cocaine-and-whisky-addled media executives really that stupid? I believe so; I think they are too brain-damaged and paranoid to collude in conspiracy. Just look at how the recording industry ignores enormous potential mp3 profits in favor of victimising their best customers. Not the actions of a very smart or rational bunch.
no subject
Date: 2004-09-12 04:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-09-12 07:25 pm (UTC)I know what you mean. For a time I worked in a bookshop. It was wonderful... kid in a candystore. Staff were allowed large discounts on books. Needless to say most of my wages went on books.
I'm surrounded by books here where I live -- a couple of thousand paper ones and a few thousand electronic. It is a miracle I get anything done at all. :)