Joy Cardin
from Thursday, February 17, 2011 at 6:00 AM
|
| From "L-O-L" to "O-M-G," the acronyms we use in email and texting are slowly creeping into our speech . . . and politicians and news anchors are no exception. After six, Joy Cardin asks her guest, "When did we start talking like text messages?"
Guest: Robert Lane Greene, correspondent for the Economist and writer for the magazine’s language blog, “Johnson.” Author of the upcoming book “You Are What You Speak: Grammar Grouches, Language Laws, and the Politics of Identity.” |
|
Downloaded programs can be played at any time in the future from your PC, copied and played on your portable MP3 player
or even burned onto CD's for playback in your car or home stereo. Please note however that you may not sell, edit or
otherwise modify the content of these programs. Also we must limit each visitor to
20 downloads per day. All programs are copyrighted by University of Wisconsin-Extension.
More questions? See our FAQ Page
|
|