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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

GENDER SENSITIVITY

Gender sensitivity

By DR LIM CHIN LAM


SCIENTISTS talk of animals as having evolved from the one-celled protists to the higher life-forms – fish, reptiles, amphibians, birds, and mammals – with man at the very top of the evolutionary tree. In such context, the mere name of the animal suffices, e.g. duck, goose, pig, cattle, etc.

There is no need to distinguish between drake and duck, gander and goose, boar and sow, bull and cow – except in specific contexts such as anatomy, physiology, and reproduction.

Outside of zoology, the word man in its different forms and usages presents some interesting features. Let us look at some of these instances.

The word ‘man’ in salutation.

The word man is commonly used as a form of address or salutation, without any hint of insult or derogation. Examples: “I say, man, could you please tell me how to get to the bus station?”, ”Hurry up, man,” and “Man! that’s huge!” (an informal construction, used especially in the United States, “to express surprise, admiration, etc.” – Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary, 1990, page 756).

To these examples, we must, of course, add our own construction in Manglish: “What, man! Do that cannot. Do this also cannot.”

Compare the situations where other forms of the word, viz. young man and woman, are used. These forms are not as innocuous as man in the above examples.

The expression “I keep telling you, woman, that all tickets have been sold out” carries a derogatory term plus a tone which the addressee may find offensive.

In “Young man, how dare you speak to me like that!”, the particular form of address is a way of chiding the speaker for his naïveté.

‘Man’ as an enclitic

Here I use the term enclitic as defined in Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary (1974), thus: “a word or particle which always follows another word, so united with it to seem a part of it.”

I recall one occasion when this enclitic caused an unseemly problem. As the dean of academic affairs in a private college, I had vetted a draft examination paper, which included the word breadman, a word commonly used and understood locally. However, the moderator from a British university (a partner under a twinning arrangement) said that the word was meaningless.

It was then duly amended to bread seller. And yet, we Malaysians commonly use the enclitic man to mean “a door-to-door vendor”, as in breadman, eggman, and newspaperman (one who sells and distributes newspapers door-to-door).

Are we Malaysians really incorrect in our use of the enclitic man? After all, an English nursery rhyme has Simple Simon going to the fair, meeting a pieman, and asking to taste his ware. If pieman can be a pie vendor, why cannot our breadman or eggman be a vendor of bread or of eggs?

We must, however, also be aware that the enclitic can also denote an occupation, e.g. fireman, policeman, and postman – as well as gender, e.g. policewoman or postwoman. Because such terms are now often regarded as outdated and sexist, “there has been a move away from -man compounds except where referring to a specific male person. Alternative gender-neutral terms which can be used instead include firefighter and police officer.” – Concise Oxford English Dictionary (2004), page 865.

However, there is no escaping the seemingly sexist enclitic -man and -woman. Thus, we have horseman, sportsman, and swordsman, and, for the female, horsewoman, sportswoman, and swordswoman (which terms are better than horseperson, sportsperson, and swordsperson).

Even then, when it comes to denoting the associated art or skill, we say horsemanship, sportsmanship, and swordsmanship – not horsewomanship, sportswomanship, and swordswomanship.

‘Man-’ as a proclitic

I realise that the term proclitic in this heading is not quite correct, but I nevertheless use it to distinguish between the enclitic man attached to the end of a word and the “proclitic” man attached to the beginning of a word. It is not quite a prefix, but rather a combining form.

Note, however, that the morpheme /man/ in such words as manager, mandate, and manufacture is not connected with the word man, unlike in most words such as manhandle, manhole, manhunt, and manslaughter. Note, too, that the latter words may be deemed sexist – but there are no gender-neutral alternative terms.

Note, furthermore, that the compound adjective, man-made – as in man-made chemicals, man-made fibres, and man-made lake – is sexist. The alternative synthetic may be substituted for man-made in the case of chemicals and fibres, but not for that of lake.

‘Man’ as a verb

The word man is also used as a verb, as in “to man the office during lunch-time” or “to man the ship”. Here again there may be sexist objections to the word – a pity because the alternative to the said verb would be the phrase “to provide personnel to service/run/operate/defend a machine/vehicle/place”.

Now try to be non-sexist and paraphrase as succinctly as possible the expressions “to man the counter in a post-office”, “to man the office during lunch-time”, “to man the boat”, and “to man the fort”.

Parting shot: “I say, man, don’t you agree that the simple word man can present so many quirks and nuances in its usage?”

WORDWISE

Wordwise

By S.H. LOKE


WHEN you can speak eloquently you will be walking on air. Here are some ‘air’ expressions to boost your confidence. Fill in the blanks with the right expression.

1. We need to _______ and settle the problem about our inheritance.

A. clear the air B. charge the air

C. cleanse the air D. fill the air

2. There was great excitement ________ on her wedding day.

A. on the air B. in the air C. off the air

D. up in the air

3. ‘Sesame Street’ is _______ now so call the children.

A. in the air B. on the air C. off the air

D. into the air

4. Our trip to Japan is _______ as our leave has not been approved.

A. on the air B. off the air

C. up in the air D. out of thin air

5. ______diseases spread easily in crowded places.

A. Air flow B. Airspace C. Airborne

D. Airspeed

6. In remote areas there is a regular _______of supplies.

A. air drop B. airdrome C. airfare

D. airflow

7. The injured were ________ to a nearby hospital.

A. air locked B. airmailed C. airlifted

D. airbrushed

8. After too much heavy drinking, some of the passengers displayed _______.

A. airlock B. airplay C. air rage

D. air raid

9. A Korean plane was shot down because it flew into Russian ________.

A. airlift B. airspace C. airflow

D. airway

10. John is ________ having obtained straight As in his SPM examination.

A. floating on air B. swimming on air

C. flying on air D. dancing on air

11. We landed on an ________ with the sea on both sides.

A. airport B. airdrop C. airstrip

D. air terminal

12. Faisal has an _______ alibi, so he is not afraid to go to court.

A. air power B. airlock C. airtime

D. airtight

Answers: 1.A, 2.B, 3.B, 4.C, 5.C, 6.A, 7.C, 8.C, 9.B, 10.A, 11.C and 12.D

ELEPHANT TALK

Elephant talk

By GRANT BARRETT


NOTES FROM THE LANGUAGE UNDERGROUND

TODAY I want to talk about elephants.

One of the joys of my work as a dictionary editor is finding arbitrary but interesting connections among words, such as those colloquial expressions in English that have to do with elephants.

White elephant? One year after the Olympics, the National Stadium in Beijing, nicknamed the ‘Bird’s Nest’, has hardly been used for sports events.

One elephant you might encounter in English is a white elephant. This is something like a building or a piece of furniture that is big, costly, and seemingly impossible to sell or give away. It can also be a programme or organisation that is a sinkhole for money, meaning that it is expensive and produces little of value. It continues to exist because it is in the favour of some person in power, or else because of inertia.

Related to this is a white elephant sale, which is the kind of event at which you are apt to find things for sale which are perfectly fine – working, clean, and otherwise OK – but yet which are unwanted. Eight-track tape players, maybe. Or a hand-cranked washing machine. Clothing that was fashionable 30 years ago and has yet to come back into style. Art made by the artless and given as gifts to the thankless – or once bought by the tasteless.

Pink elephants are a joking way to describe the hallucinations – strange, imaginary visions and thoughts – you might see if you are excessively drunk or under the influence of drugs. A pink elephant is also used to mean something extraordinary.

Pink elephant is also often used when talking about how hard it is to not think of something once it’s been mentioned. If I tell you: “Don’t think of pink elephants,” what are you going to do? You’re going to think about pink elephants.

The approximate opposite of a pink elephant is the elephant in the room or elephant in the living room. “They ignored the elephant in the room: their daughter still would not speak to them until they agreed to let her go to the beach with her friends.”

This sort of elephant is so big you can’t miss it. Everyone knows it’s there, but nobody mentions it, usually because there seems to be no happy solution to whatever problem that elephant represents.

Elephants are often used metaphorically because of their size. In gold mining and the petroleum business, a piece of land with very large deposits might be called an elephant. Similarly, jumbo, meaning very big, is connected in history to a famous elephant who was considered to be a very large specimen. Since the 1860s, the term has been used for anything that is larger than ordinary.

Indirectly, dumbo, meaning a dumb person, is an elephant-ish term, as it was popularised by the elephant who flew with his ears in the 1941 Disney movie Dumbo. It is probably a play off of jumbo.

One outdated expression that is now little used except by writers who are looking for a bit of historical colour – meaning you’ll probably never hear this expression from the mouth of your average English speaker – is to see the elephant.

This means to become experienced, or to have passed through life or some event (or series of events) and come out on the other side wiser, or to just plain see, hear, feel, and experience everything that an occasion, or life itself, can provide. You might say of a soldier: “You could tell when a soldier had seen the elephant. He had a thousand-yard stare, he could fall asleep at a moment’s notice, and his commanding officer listened to his opinions.”

(A thousand-yard stare is a sharp, unblinking gaze that appears to see nothing at all but at the same time seems to look through you and into your soul.)

By the way, to see the light or to have a come-to-Jesus moment are similar to see the elephant. To see the light means to finally come around to someone else’s point of view. A come-to-Jesus moment is a revelation or sudden overturning of previous attitudes or beliefs. Both of these are still common.

A rare bit of old-fashioned jargon that I picked up from my research is the expression the elephant walks, meaning, “it’s payday”. I found it in a collection of jargon from elevator constructors in the 1930s. I like the expression and use it, but the elephant in my room is that when I do, nobody knows what I’m talking about.

Grant Barrett is editorial director of Wordnik, http://www.wordnik.com, a new online dictionary that aims to collect every word in English.

Monday, August 24, 2009

PERLIS SPM TRIAL 2009

BAHASA INGGERIS PAPER 1 & 2

FUN WITH SYNONYMS

Fun with Synonyms

By OH TEIK THEAM


FOR each set of three words below, find a rhyme for the second and third words so that you get three words (including the italicised word, which rhymes with the first word) that are synonyms of each other.

Example: dry, keep, lob > cry, weep, sob.

1. depress, rescue, spell > repress, ____, ____

2. lad, abstain, hazy > mad, ____, ____

3. doubt, sell, soar > shout, ____, ____

4. falter, range, scary > alter, ____, ____

5. ginger, farm, spurt > injure, ____, ____

6. refer, intone, sojourn > defer, ____, ____

7. efface, vinegar, vacillate > deface, ____, ___

8. rain, bake, hang > pain, ____, ____

9. rent, spell, coder > scent, ____, ____

10. dangle, joke, allocate > strangle, ____, ___

11. calculus, attentive, blur > stimulus, ____, ____

12. hesitate, sex, kettle > irritate, ____, ____

13. rigour, synergy, length > vigour, ____, ___

14. rift, praise, cultivate > lift, ____, ____

15. test, hellish, bestow > zest, ____, ____

16. froth, languor, page > wrath, ____, ____

17. hoist, camp, bet > moist, ____, ____

18. comprise, ordain, torn > despise, ____, ____

19. bleat, applaud, receive > cheat, ____, ____

20. by, useful, provident > shy, ____, ____

Answers

1. subdue, quell 2. insane, crazy 3. yell, roar 4. change, vary 5. harm, hurt 6. postpone, adjourn 7. disfigure, mutilate 8. ache, pang 9. smell, odour 10. choke, suffocate 11. incentive, spur 12. vex, nettle 13. energy, strength 14. raise, elevate 15. relish, gusto 16. anger, rage 17. damp, wet 18. disdain, scorn 19. defraud, deceive 20. bashful, diffident

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

WORDWISE

Wordwise

By S.H. LOKE


Think of a fourth word related to all the three words listed below. Example: Cakes, heart, sixteen

The answer is “sweet”. Cakes are sweet; sweet is part of the word “sweetheart”’ and part of the phrase “sweet sixteen”. Now try these words:

1. Surprise, line, birthday

2. Foot, snow, dance

3. Mouse, blue, cottage

4. Nap, bird, call

5. Golf, foot, country

6. Tiger, news, plate

7. Maple, beet, loaf

8. Show, oak, plan

9. Lawn, village, golf

10. Hand, shiver, milk

11. Elephant, lie, Christmas

12. Atop, sell, procession

13. Length, back, stick

14. Blanket, land, nurse

15. Darkness, sadness, hopelessness

16. Focus, see, opener

17. Order, out, abiding

18. Light, blue, shine

19. Cat, on, girl

20. Wolf, blower, stop

Answers

1. Party 2. Ball 3. Cheese 4. Cat 5. Club 6. Paper 7. Sugar 8. Floor 9. Green 10. Shake 11. White 12. Float 13. Yard 14. Wet 15. Gloom 16. Eye 17. Law 18. Moon 19. Call 20. Whistle

Adapted from ‘New Family Quiz’ book by Reader’s Digest

EATING CORN ON THE COB

Eating corn on the cob

Idiomania
By OH TEIK THEAM


LISA and Joanne are enjoying some delicious ais kacang at a food stall. Looking at the generous helpings of maize grains in their bowls, Lisa asks her bosom friend, “Jo, how do you eat your corn on the cob?”

Recovering quickly from the little surprise, Joanne replies, her spoon arrested in her hand, “Well, I go round the ear in a circle. Is there a better way?”

“The interesting thing about eating corn on the cob is that everyone thinks that her way is the right one,” says Lisa with an impish grin. “I, too, go round the ear in a circle, but my better half and I don’t see eye to eye on this trivial matter – he eats his corn on the cob in a different way.”

“How does he eat it?” Joanne asks.

“He nibbles from side to side like a typewriter, eating the grains from left to right and repeating the process until they all disappear into his mouth,” Lisa says. With an exaggerated sigh, she adds, “He finds fault with my way of eating this food and boasts that his way is inarguably the proper one.”

“How does your daughter eat it?” Joanne asks.

“Well, she follows her father’s style, but with a remarkable difference – she has a bidirectional approach.”

“What do you mean?” Joanne says. “I’m ‘corn-fused’.”

“Well,” explains Lisa, “her bites are from left to right and then from right to left, and she repeats this methodical attack until all the golden grains are orally stripped from the cob.”

Tickled pink, Joanne says as a cheerful smile overspreads her rubicund face, “Well, I never! I think this is an unusual way of eating corn on the cob!”

“I couldn’t agree more,” Lisa says, spooning some of the ais kacang into her mouth. And then with a twinkle in her eye, she asks, “Have you seen small children eating corn on the cob?”

“No.”

“They like to eat the soft spots first, resulting in messy corn ears.”

Joanne exclaims shrilly, “A-maize-ing kids!”

Bosom friend: A very close friend.

Someone’s better half: Someone’s husband or wife.

See eye to eye: To agree.

Find fault with: To criticise.

Tickled pink: Extremely amused or delighted.

Well, I never!: I’ve never heard or seen anything like this before.

Couldn’t agree more: Agree completely.

UNDER THE WEATHER

Under the weather

Mind Our English by LYDIA TEH


EH Poh Nim was waiting with her sister to see the doctor at the neighbourhood clinic. Poh Lun leaned her back against the wall and rubbed her running nose with a bunch of tissues.

“You should’ve listened to us. Ma asked you to bring your thick sweater up to Genting and I said you might catch your death going out without enough clothes. But you wouldn’t listen. Now you’ve caught a bad cold. Serves you right,” Eh Poh Nim said.

“Whatever,” Poh Lun muttered.

“Aunty, what is catch your death?” a young boy of about eight or nine addressed Eh Poh Nim. “Can you catch dead people?”

Eh Poh Nim smiled. “Of course you can’t. This phrase is sometimes called catch your death of cold. Now can you guess what that means?”

The boy thought for a while, then he said, “Catch a cold?”

“Very clever. Since you’re so smart, you should know that I’m not an aunty. Call me Chieh Chieh, okay? I’m not married or old enough, you know,” Eh Poh Nim said.

Poh Lun sniggered.

“Shut up or I’ll knock your leg out of joint,” Eh Poh Nim said.

“Bye, Aunty!” the boy said, following his mother out of the clinic.

“Why don’t you dislocate the boy’s bones… A-tishoo!” Poh Lun wiped her nose again.

The Indian man who was seated beside her on the couch moved further away.

“I hope you don’t have the swine flu,” he said.

“It’s called the A(H1N1) flu,” Eh Poh Nim said. “My sister didn’t go overseas and she didn’t come into contact with anyone who has the flu, so I doubt it. I think it’s just a common cold. What about you? You look like death warmed up.”

“What? Do you mean I’m close to death? Eh! You watch your mouth!” the man said angrily.

“Sorry,” Eh Poh Nim grimaced. “I don’t mean that. It’s just an expression for looking very ill.”

“Oh ...” the man’s anger dissipated as quickly as it had appeared. “I feel really ill.”

“With all this hot weather, it’s not unusual for people to feel under the weather. People don’t fall sick because they don’t wear enough clothes,” Poh Lun said.

“Did you know that in the olden days, when a sailor was unwell, he was sent under the deck and away from the weather so that he could ...” Before she could finish the sentence, Eh Poh Nim sneezed.

“Uh-oh, you’re looking a bit off-colour, sis. Maybe you’ve caught the flu bug, too.” Poh Lun stared at her sister.

I don’t look ill. I have the constitution of an ox,” Eh Poh Nim boasted.

“Yeah, right. You were sick only two months ago when you had a bad sore throat, remember? Strong and healthy my foot!” Poh Lun retorted.

“I didn’t have a sore throat. I merely had a frog in the throat, that’s all?” Eh Poh Nim shot back.

The Indian man turned to stare at Eh Poh Nim with a questioning look.

“That means I’ve got phlegm in my throat,” Eh Poh Nim explained.

A middle-aged woman and a teenage girl walked into the clinic.

“I’ll wait for you outside,” Eh Poh Nim told her sister. “It’s getting too crowded in here. I need a breath of fresh air.”

When Eh Poh Nim vacated her seat, the girl moved in to take her place. Suddenly the girl threw up. The vomit landed on the floor and a few drops splashed onto Eh Poh Nim’s shoes.

“You’d better go and clean up, Ah Mei,” the woman told the girl. To Eh Poh Nim, she said: “So sorry. My girl’s in a bad way. I think she’s got food poisoning.”

Eh Poh Nim flashed a tight smile at the woman. Quick as a flash, the dispensary nurse hurried over with a pail of water and a mop.

“Let me do it.” The woman took the mop from the nurse. “Sorry to make such a mess.”

Eh Poh Nim felt her tension loosening. The little mishap wasn’t anyone’s fault. The girl was in a poor condition after all. She made her way to the toilet to wash the vomit off her shoes. It was a good thing she wasn’t wearing sandals. When the girl passed her on the way out of the toilet, Eh Poh Nim smiled sympathetically at her.