Originally posted by Sir Velo
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Pedants' Paradise
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This is a sticky topic.
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Last edited by LMcD; 13-08-19, 03:40.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI think most people have heard of the orchestra at last night's Prom and don't feel the need to have the meaning or relevance of 'Divan' explained to them.
I feel the need! And it took quite a bit of googling & reading to find out.... Wikipedia didn't help. So the BBC providing a quick explanation would be useful to many people. Isn't that what the BBC is there for, to educate and inform the general populace.
For the majority/minority reading this thread who also feel the need:
"The orchestra was named after a collection of poems [West–östlicher Divan (West–Eastern Diwan)] by [Johann Wolfgang von] Goethe, inspired by the Persian poet Hafiz, which deal with the idea of the Other as a manifestation or element of the Self."
The West-Eastern Divan Orchestra co-founded by Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said is an essay towards conversation between the Palestinian Territories and Israel.
Note, Wikipedia translates Divan as Diwan. Is the v -> w translation correct?
As the usual translation, or alternative meaning, of 'divan' is 'couch', I wondered what furniture had to do with it; auntie put me straight, from arabic, it also translates as "assemblage":
Last edited by Mal; 13-08-19, 07:19.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostBut this morning, for the first time, a recording was announced as being by the 'Dresden State Orchestra' - am I alone in thinking that it just doesn't sound right (and is it even accurate?)
Traditional rivalry with Saxony's other main city, Leipzig, goes on. This name of the orchestra reminds Leipzig that they are the historical royal capital of Saxony and that Leipzig is some kind commercial upstart whose orchestra is rather vulgarly named after the Cloth Merchants' Hall .
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Controversiality
...was spoken this morning by the Rt Hon Harriet Harman QC MP, Mother of the House of Commons, on R4 Today (at 8.18 a.m.) during an interview with Nick Robinson. I have looked in vain for 'controversiality' [n] in the online Collins, Chambers 21st Century, Cambridge and Oxford Advanced Learner's dictionaries, though the Free Dictionary/Wiktionary does have it as 'the quality or state of being controversial'. I find this use of the suffix -ity lazy and confusing. Has the use of 'controversy' gone out of fashion or does that word really mean something different? I couldn't even find 'controversiality' in Merriam-Webster.
Retiring Speaker John Bercow, whose deployment (to use one of his favourites) of colourful vocabulary in gleefully putting down misbehaving Members of the Commons has been a source of amusement for Private Eye-reading types, was variously referred to by Ms Harman during the interview as 'John BAR-cow' and 'John Ber-COW'. Is this longest-ever continuously-serving female Member of the House unaware of the customary pronunciation of Mr Speaker's name after his ten-years in the chair?
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Postcontroversiality ... is different from controversy, which refers to one specific example.
"The controversiality around the Speaker, which you've reflected in your package, is because actually the executive doesn't want Parliament to have its say."
Speaker Bercow is and has been a controversial figure, but is he in a continual state of controversy, the cause of multiple controversies, or can the controversy (the word that most people might use here) surrounding the Speaker be regarded as a (singular) general condition?
Also, why is controversiality absent from the four reputable English dictionaries mentioned above? (I don't have access to the online OED proper; it's £90 for a peek.)
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post.
... I think, in the context you quote, the word required is indeed controversy.
And I hope it will be CONtroversy and not conTROVersy....
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostIf memory serves, Alistair Burnet - arguably the greatest of all TV newsreaders - used to refer to events in Cuventry. .
I have a friend who hails from Coventry who maintains that now-a-days it is co ventry. I have to tell him, again and again, that that may be what some people say - but he and they are WRONG.
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