Originally posted by Kattrup
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
Oh I did lightly chuckle to myself, MrB - you need to get yourself over to the The Greatest Thread of All, where you evidently thought you were!
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostDon’t forget the thread title.
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
"It's a poor workman that blames his tools" -- Old Proverb.
I think that newspaper archives, some with millions of pages digitized, gives an excellent opportunity to study language patterns.
Of course, those failing to find "bumbling buffoon" before 1940 will always insist it must be a fault in the system, despite the same system readily spitting out hundreds of examples of its use in the 1950s-1980s--an era totally consistent with other indications of the diary's modernity.
They can give no logical reason for this, other than to complain that the technology is not giving the results they so obviously want.
But RJ, I have given a reason for this. I think the diary was probably written by someone in the latter half of the 20th century. Probably, but not certainly. The language suggests that to me.
But that’s not the game we are playing - we’re looking for a single knock-out blow for the diary’s authenticity and some - Baron being the most ridiculously convinced of all - claim to have found a multitude of them.
We really didn’t need to resort to Ngrams etc to detect a modern feel to the language, did we? Perhaps some do because they have little feeling for English usage.Last edited by MrBarnett; 10-27-2021, 04:05 PM.
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
"It's a poor workman that blames his tools" -- Old Proverb.
I think that newspaper archives, some with millions of pages digitized, gives an excellent opportunity to study language patterns.
Of course, those failing to find "bumbling buffoon" before 1940 will always insist it must be a fault in the system, despite the same system readily spitting out hundreds of examples of its use in the 1950s-1980s--an era totally consistent with other indications of the diary's modernity.
They can give no logical reason for this, other than to complain that the technology is not giving the results they so obviously want.
‘Brown of Brentford, the bucolic bounding buffoon of Bumbledom’
a language pattern? Or just a spontaneous use of alliteration?
Don’t forget the thread title.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
Do you remember the pathetic little water fountains that were around in schools, parks etc back in the day? You may be too young to remember them, but they were about as useful to a thirsty child as Ngrams is to a seeker after linguistic absolutes.
I think that newspaper archives, some with millions of pages digitized, gives an excellent opportunity to study language patterns.
Of course, those failing to find "bumbling buffoon" before 1940 will always insist it must be a fault in the system, despite the same system readily spitting out hundreds of examples of its use in the 1950s-1980s--an era totally consistent with other indications of the diary's modernity.
They can give no logical reason for this, other than to complain that the technology is not giving the results they so obviously want.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
Do you remember the pathetic little water fountains that were around in schools, parks etc back in the day? You may be too young to remember them, but they were about as useful to a thirsty child as Ngrams is to a seeker after linguistic absolutes.
And the behaviour of the pupils was even worse.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
But I thought these posters were founts of all knowledge, MrB - including knowing what a twisted serial killer would or would not write in his personal diary in 1888?Last edited by MrBarnett; 10-27-2021, 03:17 PM.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
It skips newspapers, doesn’t cover all books, and has nothing whatsoever to tell us about private correspondence/diaries (except the minute % that have been published) or conversational English usage.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostThe iceberg is swiftly approaching SS Ngram, Cap’n Baron. All the sensible rats have departed, you really don’t need to go down with it.
IkeLast edited by Iconoclast; 10-27-2021, 03:11 PM.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostOMG - fantastic - I hadn't realised that Google Ngrams skipped newspapers!!!!
Can you imagine how many newly-coined words and phrases are being used right now, today, likely to appear in daily speech, in emails, texts, television news, and printed newspapers long before they ever make it into a book?
And here's me believing that Google Ngrams was actually an all-encompassing sword of truth where literature of any form was concerned.
What a fool am I!
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You’ve proved my point, Baron. Ngrams is inadequate even in relation to printed material. Just imagine if the man who coined the witty, alliterative description of the Brentford Bumble had used it in a private letter or in his diary instead of in an article.
You’d be claiming that no one in the 19th century could possibly have thought of combining bounding and buffoon.
The iceberg is swiftly approaching SS Ngram, Cap’n Baron. All the sensible rats have departed, you really don’t need to go down with it.Last edited by MrBarnett; 10-27-2021, 03:04 PM.
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OMG - fantastic - I hadn't realised that Google Ngrams skipped newspapers!!!!
Can you imagine how many newly-coined words and phrases are being used right now, today, likely to appear in daily speech, in emails, texts, television news, and printed newspapers long before they ever make it into a book?
And here's me believing that Google Ngrams was actually an all-encompassing sword of truth where literature of any form was concerned.
What a fool am I!
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