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Sports Talk: A Dictionary of Sports Metaphors

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Sports Talk: A Dictionary of Sports Metaphors

Contributors:

By (Author) Robert Palmatier
By (author) Harold Ray

ISBN:

9780313264269

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Greenwood Press

Publication Date:

24th March 1989

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

796.014

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

245

Description

provide[s] informative and entertaining browsing, depicting how filled our language is with sports metaphors, many of whose derivations are little known: `the devil to pay,' `hazard a guess,' `red herring,' etc. Even libraries with numerous other sports dictionaries will want this work. Recommended for high school, public, and academic libraries. Choice This comprehensive dictionary brings together for the first time the popular words and expressions in American English that derive from terms associated with sports, games, and recreation. Many of these terms are now an integral part of the language, with others joining them all the time. The more than 1,700 terms in the dictionary are arranged alphabetically by first word. Full entries follow. At the end of the book a useful appendix classifies the metaphors according to the sports from which they originate. Each entry in this exhaustive resource contains an example of the popular use of the metaphor, indicating its part of speech; a definition of the metaphor; an identification of the probable source of the term; a definition of the metaphor as used within the sport or game of origin; a citation of other reference works; a discussion of how the term evolved from sports to popular use; and cross-references to other entries. The entries are preceded by a key which decodes the abbreviations used for other reference works and are followed by the source list of metaphors. Sports Talk is an essential resource for teachers, journalists, historians, linguists, etymologists, coaches, and others interested in sports and the language.

Reviews

An alphabetical listing of more than 1,700 metaphors from a wide variety of sports, games, and amusements. Each entry gives a definition, an example of proper usage, the metaphor's source (sometimes probable), and the date of origin if known. Metaphors have been painstakingly gathered from such varied sources as books, periodicals, and newspapers as well as radio and television and even speeches, interviews, and conversations. When encountered they have been checked against a number of cited works. An appendix classifies these metaphors etymologically, listing sources from animal games to yo-yo. Coauthored by professors of linguistics and of health, physical education, and recreation, this book will be of interest to many linguists, etymologists, journalists, and historians and other students of American culture, as well as to aficionados of sports. It should also provide informative and entertaining browsing, depicting how filled our language is with sports metaphors, many of whose derivations are little known: the devil to pay, ' hazard a guess, ' red herring, ' etc. Even libraries with numerous other sports dictionaries will want this work. Recommended for high school, public, and academic libraries.-Choice
"An alphabetical listing of more than 1,700 metaphors from a wide variety of sports, games, and amusements. Each entry gives a definition, an example of proper usage, the metaphor's source (sometimes probable), and the date of origin if known. Metaphors have been painstakingly gathered from such varied sources as books, periodicals, and newspapers as well as radio and television and even speeches, interviews, and conversations. When encountered they have been checked against a number of cited works. An appendix classifies these metaphors etymologically, listing sources from animal games to yo-yo. Coauthored by professors of linguistics and of health, physical education, and recreation, this book will be of interest to many linguists, etymologists, journalists, and historians and other students of American culture, as well as to aficionados of sports. It should also provide informative and entertaining browsing, depicting how filled our language is with sports metaphors, many of whose derivations are little known: the devil to pay, ' hazard a guess, ' red herring, ' etc. Even libraries with numerous other sports dictionaries will want this work. Recommended for high school, public, and academic libraries."-Choice

Author Bio

ROBERT A. PALMATIER is Professor of Linguistics, Department of Languages and Linguistics, Western Michigan University. His two previous books dealt with the topics of transformational grammar and syntax. HAROLD L. RAY is Professor, Department of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation, Western Michigan University. He is currently working on biographies of George (Potsy) Clark, the first coach of the Detroit Lions, and James Hayes, sportsman and hosteler.

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