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The Paris Review - How Rebracketing Gives Us New Words

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How rebracketing gives us new words. How is a helipad like a cheeseburger? It’s all about arms being legs, and having an ear. There are words that sound right in a language and words that sound wrong, and the latter often, as the gangsters say, go on a little trip. A sound or two will […]

It's What We Do', Ed Vulliamy

Preview issue no. 41 at theparisreview.org. “I am an obscure, doubly obscure, novelist with an unpronounceable name”: An interview with Vladimir

The Paris Review No. 41 Summer-Fall 1967

The Syntax of Early English - Cryptm.org

The Paris Review One Word Archives - The Paris Review

Knowledge Engineering for Word-Formation: Generating and

PDF) [Ilse Wischer, Gabriele Diewald] New Reflections o(Book Fi

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The Paris Review On Translation Archives - Page 2 of 6 - The Paris

Paris, France: Sadruddin Aga Khan, 1968. First Printing. Softcover. This vintage number of the prestigious literary journal then-chiefly edited by

The Paris Review Vol. 12 No. 45 Winter 1968 by George Plimpton, Bill Berkson, Richard Brautigan, Louis-Ferdinand Celine on Third Mind Books

Paris Review - Damion Searls