Title: Effectiveness intensified
1Effectiveness intensified
- A process of conventionalisation?
2From new to norm
- Patrick Hanks talks about exploitation devices
metaphor, ellipsis, ways in which the normal
can become exploited for new concepts, he says
todays exploitations are tomorrows norms - I will be looking at some examples of this
gradual normalisation of some intensifiers
3How coinage is normalised
- Partington (Irony conventionalised) hypothesises
how - i) someone coins a phrase whose effect relies on
a clash in evaluative prosody - ii) other people like it so much it gets repeated
- iii) the clash eventually becomes one normal
usage of the phrase - Examples with an outbreak of with positive
collocates rather than negative
4So some intensifiers with similar properties
- They involve evaluation
- They might involve more than one point of view
and thus involve an evaluative shift - They belong to the genres which imitate spoken
informal language for particular purposes - They are new enough for us to be able to observe
the gradual growth and to be aware of our
primings independently of the OED and raise
interesting issues about dictionary entries.
5Something rotten
- In the dictionary we find
- Rotten (adj. which MEDAL tells us is often used
to talk about someone who has behaved in an
unpleasant way and is used humorously as in you
rotten sod) - so we are already into metaphorical exploitation,
its not about decay. - On inquiry of both Sibols a couple of patterns
emerge for the unit something rotten
6The almost literal
- There are no examples which are clearly literal
in the Sibols, a couple which are borderline
metaphorical - renowned for never putting a foot wrong, Owen may
be about to step into something rotten. But - Inside, the Fenice cannot quite mask the
lingering whiff of corruption, doubt and
something rotten
7The metaphorical quotation
- A large number of the occurrences are,
unsurprisingly, forms of the Shakespearian
quotation - The original has been taken and shaken in the
usual way, as Partington and Morley have taught
us - in headlines with puns and via a number of
variations on the theme.
8Journos love quotations
- Two articles about the same story, both chose the
same quotation - Something rotten in the state of dentistry
Home News Hoggart, - Something rotten in Valerie's teeth wars
Liddle, Rod - And
- Something rotten in the estate of Denmark Hill?
Car smells tend to linger - Adams declares that there is "something rotten in
the state of local government", but fails to
offer - that the young prince turns bling. He wears
something rotten from the place of Primark - ambitious trilogy which surveys the state of
Denmark's class system, and finds something
rotten in
9But also
- another pattern, creeping up in frequency, and
another of the SiBol evaluative hype items - 27 examples in Old Sybil and 40 in Young
- an intensifier with shifting evaluation, on the
rise.
10- From Old Sibol
- The young ladies fancied Mr Bingley something
rotten. He, in his turn, - And it shows up dandruff something rotten. I have
no idea whether Cash - "Daryl Hannah? She's lovely. I fancy her
something rotten... she's meant - Elms has always fancied himself something rotten.
- I had lunch with Vanessa last week. She fancies
me something rotten. - to go home and, anyway, those glass slippers
pinch something rotten by, - diary seem dowdy, they show up my slouchiness
something rotten. We've - opt for Lady or Baroness. It will screw up the
statistics something rotten. - nubile girls. Any man who watched it would be
teased something rotten, - Lindsay Crouse plays the psychiatrist stitched up
something rotten by Joe Mantegna and his cynically
11From Young SibolBut then JB went and upset his
fans something rotten by announcing that the Gulf
She has, in short, queered the pitch something
rotten. Yesterday, Mr John Patten, The British
contingent, meanwhile, is hamming it up something
rotten. 'Vince In the flesh Bartoli works her
audience something rotten with a touch of lazy,
self-indulgent showing off - all the letters
are written by computer and that they're ripping
off customers something rotten.handed a note.
''I was on the jury,'' it said (more or less)
''and I fancy you something rotten. Let's meet
for a drink.'She doesn't have a go at me, but
I have a go at myself. I make fun of her
something rotten, far too frequently. I half know
I'm doing it and I half don't
12- Verb (patient?) something rotten.
- Post-modification of the verb adding force to the
action - a less clear prosody, connected with point of
view, pleasurably painful? - Notice the extension of contexts beyond spoiling
and fancying
13POVs and voyeurs
- so point of view is a key element.
- Also the feeling that there is an observer role,
much of the data comes from film theatre or TV
reviews, or there is some narrative element where
an account is being provided.
14Found with fancy
- In MEDAL you find it as an idiomatic unit with
fancy and spoil - Rotten2
- fancy someone rotten (British informal to be
sexually attracted to someone very strongly)
which suggests - it is salient enough as a unit of meaning in the
corpus to be mentioned - It is found in the Macmillan corpus restricted to
this collocation
15In Sibol
- One can find
- Make fun of, fancy, queered the pitch, hamming it
up, works her audience, ripping off customers,
conning his audience, shows up, fancied himself,
pinch, stitched up (audience) teased, screw up
the statistics - They are rigorously informal idiomatic units
- These have pragmatic meanings, there is an
observer stance in all of them - There is a slight increase in intensifying use
from old to young Sibol. - It has a textual preference for end of sentence
position or end of clause position.
16Observing and narrating
- the quotation derivatives and the borderline
literal items suggest a negative prosody but
something rotten at sentence end as a verb
modifier is not totally negative - ASP has already pointed out the shift between
protagonist and observer (writer or speaker) in
shifting SP and the examples here all have some
possible shift between the two. - All seem to mean a lot, intensely, and perhaps
also very effectively,
17decentering
- Is it schadenfreude or ruefulness?
- can we just classify it as an intensifier with
as yet limited exploitation? - It is concerned with the effect on others,
sometimes negative effects but is not a wholly
negative prosody. - It is definitely concerned with interaction
between a number of participants with (perhaps)
conflicting aims. - there is a decentred, relativist observer role,
or there is some narrative element where an
account is being provided
18Semingly?
- A seme?
- in this case I would suggest it contains an idea
of effectiveness or effect. - (good or bad effective)
- in this case does the effectiveness aspect starts
to contribute (in delexicalised form) as an
intensifier?
19Another example drop dead
- In Old Sibol many of the examples are about
literally dropping dead. (from heart attacks
etc.) - 40 out of 105 occurrences have nothing to do with
literal death but rather with the exaggerated
effectiveness of someones appearance. - Could we call this a prosodic clash? (she is so
beautiful people drop dead a the sight of her).
The most prolific exploitation is that of drop
dead gorgeous but we also find cool, chic,
glamour, beauty, insolence, swoon material
20A unit of meaning
- In MEDAL it is to be found under the phrases with
drop (13 meanings given plus phrases, along
with drop-down menu and drop-kick) as - drop-dead gorgeous adj. informal extremely
attractive. - Which suggests that in the Macmillan corpus it is
restricted to that collocation, that it is a
multi-word unit
21Further exploitation
- In papers 2005 we find exploitation of the unit
has been extended to contexts other than sheer
physical human beauty - it occurs with stunning, catchy, chic,
classic, cool, dreamy, elegant, expensive,
fabulous, funny glitz, gorgeous (35), prices,
sexy - with beauty, elegance, glamour (both Hollywood
and Euro-Trash) looks, couture, sexiness,
sophistication, - But also with stateroom, humour, wisecracks,
one-liners. - And with pissed, plain, rich, simple
22intensifying
- It has been extended from fashion and physical
appearance to cars, food, restaurants and the
theatre and cinema. Its ever-so Young-Sibol and
a teensy bit New Irony. And very promotional. - it is used to modify nouns and adjectives and as
an adjective in its own right. A useful all
purpose intensifier? - The evaluation seems to waver but appears to
involve some kind of observer admiration of
thoroughness or effectiveness
23Double prosody?
- that shopping institution famed for drop-dead
gorgeous couture, some at drop-dead prices, is - say, Mahler. You go there to get drop-dead pissed
and have sex with as many people as possible - there's nowhere for shoddy workmanship to hide
in a drop-dead, plain black dress, so the cut and - LuPone has the right raddled glamour and
drop-dead insolence as she delivers such immortal
lines
24From Young sibol
- innovative use of first-person game play, and its
drop-dead gorgeous 3-D graphics. who is 75,
recalls the final age of drop dead Hollywood
glamour to be happening, and the staging too
often fails to capture the drop-dead humour,
charged energy This is the David Beckham of
footie franchises drop-dead looks, chock-full of
premium branding, Spider fooled into sex by
drop-dead male Highfield, Roger A. You go there
to get drop-dead pissed and have sex with as many
people as possible there's nowhere for shoddy
workmanship to hide in a drop-dead, plain black
dress, - I am tempted to confess I use four creams and am
drop-dead rich, but decide she - have little in
common beyond their drop-dead sexiness. Still,
there are are the most powerful people around. So
the women had to be drop-dead sexy as well as a
to ruched silk. As well as a finale of drop-dead,
silk satin goddess gowns, there were The best
dishes are drop-dead simple fried potatoes
topped with chilli sauce, - For drop-dead sophistication, head to Roland
Mouret (020 7376 common request is for about 20
seats, an office area, kitchens and a drop-dead
stateroom. The idea a blind date with a woman who
was drop-dead stunning. She was only a year older
than him, but and the dialogue brims with the
sharp, drop-dead wisecracks that have
25And another one.big time
- Most occurrences in SiBol involve the unit the
big time, many also involve an adjectival unit
big time politics, big time snooker etc - But there is a growing use of an adverbial
adjunct with intensifying meaning - Sometimes positive sometimes negative
26In MEDAL and SiBoL
- MEDAL
- Big time (adv) spoken, used for emphasizing how
extreme or severe something is - Do you have problems with it? Yeah big time.
- Old Sibol 332 in all 18 adverbial use
- Young Sibol 588 in all 143 adverbial use
27Big time
- I'm frequently told that natural birth can suck,
big-time, but for a weed like - vote on the European constitution, he says "I'm
going to say 'no' big time. - in me and I've repaid him by scoring. I respect
him a lot now. Big time." 1 - Millwall manager Colin Lee said he was "cheesed
off big time'' after Ben - always thought Guevara and Keane would have hit
it off big time. They've e - Alan Smith. "F Fergie is a shouse. He's
pd me off big time. U - of time, passion and financial risk is likely to
pay off big time. For more - The slight amount of fiddling around in the
method pays off big time in - the robbery is laughably botched, and the cookie
store takes off big-time, - Yes, yoga for young children is taking off big
time. In the past six months, - to come. Despite its proud slogan, "We're ripping
you off big time", many o. - And the trend is catching on big time among the
young and the high life at - gle. If we don't manage to lift our game then
we'll get caught out big time. It - never held a job for more than a week, invariably
falling out big time with - people, and those behind them, need to be caught
and punished big time
28Intensifying adjuncts of manner
- They provide evaluation and intensification
- They might be said to prime us with a particular
semantic prosody good/bad effective - They are new enough for us to be able to observe
the gradual growth and to be aware of our
primings - They are still register specific co-ocurring with
other rigorously informal lexical items - They might even be a sign of an increasing
insolating tendancy of English
29Hype
- They belong to the genres which imitate spoken
informal language for particular purposes - their increase in Sibol is a function of the
increased space in promotional/review material
which, like advertising, imitates the spoken
language - a sign that such an increase in promotional
material (cf the Cardiff report and Flat Earth
News) creates a need for new intensifiers to
provide the necessary hype(erbole)
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