NOT YOUR USUAL SUSPECTS

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Monday, June 27, 2011

PLAYING WITH WORDS




As a teenager, I wanted to be an actress and hearing that Columbia University had an excellent drama department, I lied about my age and enrolled in two non-matriculating evening courses—one was Shakespeare presided over by a professor who impressed with her stature and imperial manner. The Bard of Avon’s sonnets and monologues rolled trippingly off her tongue as she gleaned every possible nuance from his words. I’m not sure if my memory serves me correctly or if my imagination is overactive but I think she told us to read the dictionary as well as Shakespeare for knowledge and enjoyment.

I often find myself doing just that. When looking up one word I think would perfectly describe a character or the words that each particular character would use in a specific situation, I lose myself in another word on the page. A word I’ve never seen in a book, magazine or newspaper, a word I’ve never heard spoken or a word that has more than one meaning—a meaning I’m unfamiliar with. When we write we have to find the right words, a hero’s speech would be nothing like a villain’s. Someone from the south uses language in a different way than someone from the west or east. People in different parts of the world will add hand gestures and facial expressions that add a new connotation to their words. Different generations use words in ways we never thought of and often change the meaning of words as we know them—think of the word gay, think of lyrics—standards from the pens of Hammerstein, Porter, Berlin, Mercer and Sondheim and think of rap in today’s world. When we’re children, a mother will explain the meaning of certain words to her child—twenty years later, the grown-up daughter will explain certain words to her mother.

Writers are often told not to use slang—slang dates—every generation invents its own. Words used by flappers in the 1920s—the cat’s pajamas, the bee’s knees, know one’s onions, Jazz age slang—big cheese, bubs, bull, the Great Depression with Apple Annie, New Deal and Hoovervilles, World War II servicemen brought cannon fodder and snafu to America’s attention, and cyberspace as we know it today has friendapalooza, LOL, TTYL and Peeping Tom. Some words once banned from the dictionary have taken root and can be found in the latest editions. I know I’ll keep on reading, and trying to find the right character for certain words that I want to use bearing in mind the warning not to use a dollar word when a ten cent word will do.


Are there words that you are longing to use?

11 comments:

Barbara Longley said...

I like to come up with things that aren't slang, but that create such a visual, or resonates with some other sense, that the reader goes, "Snap! I know just what you mean."
It's this writer's "sweet spot," and it doesn't happen all the time, and it never comes easy. Write on!

Elise Warner said...

But when it happens, "How sweet it is."

Toni Anderson said...

I love words. My husband often uses his own inventions which make me smile They sound good too though :)

Elise Warner said...

A world of words all your own. Sounds good, Toni.

Marcelle Dubé said...

Fun post, Elise. Of course I love words, too. Maybe a little too much. I often get "the look" from Rotten Daughter #2 who will tell me, "I don't know what you just said."

Maybe my use of three-dollar words is a rebellion against my day job, in which I have to use common denominator words.

Elise Warner said...

Marcelle, I once lost a job by using a word that had more than one meaning. Perhaps it was subconscious.

Maureen A. Miller said...

I can use words that I have invented if I simply put quotes around them. Then when the editor comes yelling, I can blame it on the character. :)

Elise Warner said...

Maureen,what a great idea.

Unknown said...

I love playing with words and can sit for hours happily reading through a thesaurus. I always think there's a better word to be used. :)

Helen Ginger said...

I don't drag out my dictionary too often anymore since I have one on the computer, but I do prefer my printed thesaurus to the one on the computer. Problem is looking up one word and not spending half an hour browsing words that catch my eye.

Clare London said...

Words are marvellous entertainment! and one of the major reasons I love writing - just to use more of them LOL. How often have I looked at a word I've never even spoken aloud, but wanted to know how to use it in a story?

I have 2 sons who roll their eyes when I try to keep up with the current slang. But I love the way language evolves, as well - even if it's only into text-speak :).

My younger son once invented a verb "to sog", to describe his cereal after he'd left the darned plate out on the kitchen worktop again, instead of washing it up :). We're waiting for it to appear in the Oxford Eng Dictionary!

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