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THE BILINGUAL LANGUAGE OF ELEGANCE

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 People no longer seem to care as much about how they dress, but there was a time when being elegant, dapper, smart, well-groomed, and stylish was the ideal everyone aspired to. Men and women dressed to kill, to the nines, and took pride in being well-dressed at all times. The Spanish language, too, bears witness to this former obsession with dress, with expressions such as ir hecho un pincel ( hecho un brazo de mar ) ir de tiros largos or maqueado.  If this increasingly casual approach to dress persists, such expressions may survive only in dictionaries. Juan vino a la fiesta hecho un pincel John came to the party dressed to the nines — “… se ponía hecho un pincel aunque solo fuera a ir al mercado.” Antonio Muñoz Molina, Sefarad , 2001. Esp. || “… lo mandé planchar, hice almidonar la camisa y…hecho un brazo de mar, bajé al comedor.” Manuel Leguineche, El camino más corto , 1995. Esp. 

EITHER... OR / O... O

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These alternatives in English  Either...or: "Either pay or go to jail." Neither... nor: "I neither love you nor need you." have their parallel equals in Spanish: O... o: "O me pagas o te parto la cara." Ni... ni: "Ni quiero ir ni puedo ir."

SHOULD HAVE AND NOT SHOULD OF

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I regularly receive the Modern Language Association newsletter The Source from the MLA Style Center, which I peruse diligently. In the issue of 29 January 2026, an article titled “A Common Mistake: Should of in Place of Should Have” caught my attention. It opens with the statement: “You may have seen people write should of , but that is grammatically incorrect.” I do not generally encounter such usage, nor do I associate with people who write in that manner. Indeed, contrary to the claim, I cannot recall ever hearing anyone say should of in place of should have . I may be living on the fringes of present-day English, but I find the assertion surprising nonetheless. The author, Laura Kiernan, suggests that “the mistake probably comes from the fact that should’ve sounds similar to should of when spoken.” Try as I might, however, I cannot hear should’ve as resembling should of . While the explanation is plausible, pointing out this “mistake” strikes me as somewhat unnecessary for ...

THE VANISHING ART OF SAYING GOODBYE

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     There was a time when manners , politeness , and etiquette were not just words, but living principles. Today, they risk becoming old-fashioned vocabulary, their meanings fading in the minds of the young. In their place, other expressions are gaining currency—often reflecting a rather different social reality.      One such expression is “to take French leave.” Traditionally, it meant departing without saying goodbye, without asking permission, without so much as a word of notice—a small but unmistakable social offense. In earlier times, such behavior would have been considered a breach of decorum, if not outright rudeness. Now, it passes almost unnoticed.    The phrase itself is a curious example of linguistic blame-shifting across cultures. The French, returning the compliment, say “filer à l’anglaise,” placing the blame squarely on the English. Spanish follows suit with “despedirse a la francesa,” suggesting, perhaps with a faint smil...

THE FRENCH DISEASE

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  There are words proscribed by society as improper and unacceptable, taboo, and which, nevertheless, we have to name and refer to. Such is the case of the word syphilis, a venereal disease that, it seems, is making a comeback. In former times, it was referred to in polite society as The French Disease , morbo gallico .  As the French had also stigmatized the word, they blamed Italians and called it le mal de Naples . Italians retaliated with il mal francese . Spaniards blamed the French also: el mal francés . It was a curse that ravaged Europe for centuries. In his book The World of Yesterday , Stephen Zweig explains its impact upon the youth of his time. 

CÓMO PRONUNCIAR "THOREAU"

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 Ya he tratado en este Blog sobre la pronunciación de nombres y apellidos en inglés y he hecho hincapié en su dificultad. No debemos bajar la guardia nunca y cerciorarnos siempre. Leyendo el New York Times (28 de marzo, 2026), veo que llevamos casi dos siglos pronunciando mal el apellido del escritor y filósofo estadounidense Henry David Thoreau. En su artículo "Rethinking Thoreau...", Sarah Lyall nos cuenta que la pronunciación no es /Zoró/, sino /Zóro/,  /THO-reau, y que el acento recae en la primera sílaba. Todo esto a propósito de un programa en ciernes de la PBS sobre el escritor, narrado por actores como George Clooney y Meryl Streep, donde, al parecer, han tenido que enseñarles la nueva -y correcta- pronunciación del apellido francés. Si los mismos nativos tienen problemas fonéticos con nombres y apellidos, recomiendo ejercer cautela siempre. 

JULIO CASARES: COSAS DEL LENGUAJE

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  Quiero recordarles a ustedes, estudiosos del idioma, dos citas de Julio Casares (1877-1964), extraídas de su Cosas del lenguaje (Espasa-Calpe, 1961), que, en mi modestísima opinión, hay que tener en cuenta al tratar esta cuestión: "... de un orden infinitamente más complejo y sutil es la lógica del lenguaje; ya que éste, como todo hecho social, como todo producto de cultura, es una obra colectiva, inestable, en cuya evolución intervienen, influyéndose recíprocamente, factores materiales, fisiológicos y psíquicos de muy diversa índole, no siempre fáciles de aislar."   "No intentemos... reformar arbitrariamente el idioma. Tal como está -sin que esto sea desconocer su calidad de perfectible- resulta un instrumento muy superior a la capacidad de casi todos los que lo empleamos; por lo cual, no estaría de más que dedicásemos a estudiar nuestra lengua la mitad del empeño que ponemos en criticarla."