English

Warwick McFayden

Hard-boiled critics seek to escape yoke of scrambled English language

Warwick-McFadyen-opinion

Warwick McFayden ''When I use a word,'' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, ''it means just what I choose it to mean ... .''

Heckler

Pardonnez moi, please excuse my English

Heckler I've just read Harriet Veitch's Heckler column ''Mon dieu! It's a nightmare'' (October 4). I am French, but I fully agree that French is hard to learn as a second language.

Heckler

English for dummies

Heckler Living abroad for more than a decade, I have observed with voyeuristic fascination the creeping bastardisation of the English language in Australia.

Elizabeth Farrelly

Lost for words in the universe of expanding English

Elizabeth Farrelly I'm cultivating the knack of being diametrically out of whack with public or market opinion. It's a potentially dangerous pursuit, considering my line of work, but I see it as a sort of x-treme sport.

Comments 21

Mary-Ruth Mendel

First languages first, then English

Aboriginal town camps need to be safe

Mary-Ruth Mendel The average four- to five-year-old has a listening vocabulary of 2800 words, which grows to an amazing 13,000 words by the time the child is between five and six.

Comments 10

Adele Horin

English by numbers - students find formula for HSC success

Adele Horin Not so long ago politicians such as Bob Carr were denouncing the dumbing down of the Higher School Certificate curriculum. John Howard, no less, took up the cudgels, singling out HSC English.

Comments 18

Peter Craven

Lincoln to shine amid the glitter

Daniel Day Lewis

Peter Craven What a Hollywood dream of cinematic distinction the Oscars are.

Ian Rose

Differences are just a slip of the mother tongue

Ian Rose

Ian Rose There's no worries about celebrating Australian English.

Heckler

Zen and the art of flatpacks

Heckler dinkus

AS I remember, it began simply enough. A new home. Some boxes to unpack. A little paint here and there. And then one evening, my wife returned home and announced she had bought a lawn mower.

Darwin, dinosaurs and the devil

Creation Museum

Mark Joseph Stern An Australian creationist believes Charles Darwin is to blame for drug abuse and pornography, and that people rode dinosaurs.

Paul Collins

Moment ripe for a pontiff from the developing world

Pope Benedict XVI.

Paul Collins I'm still getting over the shock of the Vatican's announcement of Pope Benedict XVI's resignation.

Paul Sheehan

Television turns up the heat in kitchen war

Marco

Paul Sheehan We didn't need to wait for the TV ratings to know that in the head-on clash between the two kitchen blockbusters, one would block and the other would bust. It was pre-ordained.

Comments 11

Elizabeth Farrelly

Cool in the tube: the terrace house stands the test of time

Elizabeth Farrelly

Elizabeth Farrelly The terrace house gives a whole new meaning to the idea of the London tube. London's standout characteristic, as you trek in by taxi or train, is neither its veiled beauty nor its vile weather,...

Jacqueline Maley

PMS may be gone but women are in no mood to lose anger

jacqueline maley dinkus

Jacqueline Maley News of the death of pre-menstrual syndrome came as a terrible shock.

Comments 235

Michael Shmith

Enigmatic to the last, crossword king Araucaria will be sorely missed

Michael Shmith

Michael Shmith The puzzle-setter's announcement of his terminal cancer was admirably cryptic.

Martin McKenzie-Murray

Cult of celebrity feeds our hunger - and our gullibility

JFK

Martin McKenzie-Murray JFK, Tiger, Armstrong - you'd think we would have learnt our lesson by now.

Word for whatever ales ya on our national day

Richard Glover dinkus, updated Feb 2012

Richard Glover Here, in the spirit of the Dag's Dictionary, is a dictionary of words you may need to use as you navigate your way through the Australia Day weekend.

Germaine Greer

Writers wonder if it's worth putting pen to paper

Germaine Greer dinkus.

Germaine Greer It is not readers' fault Australian writers cannot make a living. And it's not the writers' fault, either.

Ben Hart

Dads, feel free to break out of the cage of low expectation

Father holding baby.

Ben Hart Many new fathers are told they don't have a role in their baby's life.

Comments 57

Stephen Bayley

Facts are boring - we need much more opinionated idiocy

Stephen Bayley opinion dinkus.

Stephen Bayley I am an idiot. You could be one, too, and it would not be disappointing. In fact, I recommend it. Idiocy is misunderstood.