Monthly Archives: March 2012

Vernal Greetings

Butterfly at the Royal Horticultural Society Gardens, Wisley
Camera: Canon EOS 7D | Lens: EF-S15-85mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM | Date: 04-02-2011 14:41 | ISO: 400 | Exp. bias: 0 EV | Exp. Time: 1/30s | Aperture: 7.1 | Focal Length: 85.0mm (~137.7mm) | Lens: Canon EF-S 15-85mm f3.5-5.6 IS USM

To celebrate the Vernal Equinox and the unseasonably pleasant weather we’ve had in the UK for the last two weeks, I thought it would be a good idea to post a nice Spring picture. By coincidence I’ve been processing some shots from a trip to the Royal Horticultural Society Gardens at Wisley, more or less a year ago. However, with the late Spring last year most of my best flower shots are of tropical orchids, which would be cheating, so instead here’s a butterfly!

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Review: The Etymologicon

By Mark Forsyth

A hilarious ramble through the undergrowth of the English language

If you’re a closet etymologist or casual linguicist, like me, then this is the book for you. Mark Forsyth leads a merry ramble through the tangled roots of the English language, identifying verbal histories and connections which are sometimes quite mind-boggling.

A sequence of short chapters each explores a topic, usually identifying a stream of words stemming from a common source, whether that be a Greek, Latin or proto-Indo-European root, a language which has been partially adopted into the English tapestry, or a fount of linguistic innovation such as the writings of Milton. In many cases he threads a route through time, geography and lexical space to words which have dramatically different or even opposite meanings to their antecedents.

While each chapter can be read alone, Forsyth cunningly links them together, with each feeding the next, and the last linking back to the first like Ouroboros swallowing its tail.

The writing is always amusing, and occasionally funny enough to stimulate a laugh out loud. Forsyth reserves particular cruelty for poets, and other specialists in the use and abuse of words. My favourite quote: “[we] should devote a chapter to Samuel Johnson’s dictionary. So we won’t.” Myles Coverdale, editor of an early English Bible, is characterised by “[he] didn’t let the tiny detail that he knew no Latin, Greek or Hebrew get in his way. This is the kind of can-do attitude that is sadly lacking in modern biblical scholarship.”

This isn’t a learned book, and its structure and style preclude any deep exploration of a particular topic. But it will convey a broad appreciation of the mixing of the rich Jambalaya which is the English language, and will certainly pique your interest at understanding where words come from, as well as their immediate meaning.

 

Categories: Reviews. Content Types: Book and Linguistics.
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Singin’ the Blues…

Andrew Elt, regular guest vocalist with the Walter Trout Band, on stage at the Mick Jagger Centre, Dartford
Camera: Canon EOS 550D | Lens: EF-S17-85mm f/4-5.6 IS USM | Date: 31-10-2010 22:52 | Resolution: 9012 x 3761 | ISO: 3200 | Exp. bias: -1 EV | Exp. Time: 1/25s | Aperture: 6.3 | Focal Length: 85.0mm (~137.7mm) | Lens: Canon EF-S 17-85mm f4-5.6 IS USM

Sorting out a few old photos, I got to some I took at a concert by the Walter Trout band in October 2010. Those of the great man himself and the other instrumentalists are fine, but I was particularly pleased with this sequence featuring the band’s regular “guest vocalist” (and roadie, and CD salesman), Andrew Elt. His performances are always absolutely bone-tingling, and this was no exception, but he also looks the part!

The images were taken with my Canon 550D held at full stretch above my head in what passes for a “mosh pit” at the Mick Jagger Centre, and I’ve used 4 out of a sequence of 9. Thank <insert deity of choice here> for ISO 3200 and image stabilisation!

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Crete Portfolio

Sunrise at the hotel, Chania
Camera: Canon EOS 7D | Date: 11-10-2010 06:04 | ISO: 200 | Exp. Time: 1/400s | Aperture: 8.0 | Focal Length: 66.0mm (~106.9mm) | Lens: Canon EF-S 17-85mm f4-5.6 IS USM

Our 2010 trip to Crete wasn’t a great success either as a holiday or photographically, mainly due to rather grotty weather. However, I did get one or two interesting shots. If you’re tempted, have a look at the album here.

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Photographic Anachronisms

Mortuary technician in Whitechapel, set in 2012, with a rather suprising camera choice!
Resolution: 887 x 591

Anachronisms in television usually consist of something too modern for the period, but I’ve just spotted the opposite. In the UK series Whitechapel the mortuary assistant takes pictures of the all-too frequent victims using a Zenit TTL. Now I know they were bomb-proof cameras – I owned one in the early 1980s and dropped it down a Pyrenee – and I know Whitechapel isn’t the wealthiest corner of London, but surely the Metropolitan police and the London Coroner’s Office could afford something saying Canon or Nikon? Not convinced…

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