Peter Trudgill
02 June 2022
Making a subtle preposition
Why do some British broadcasters appear to suffer from a linguistic inferiority complex about natural English grammar?
Read the full article26 May 2022
The demise of Comancheria
Comanche was once a powerful imperial language, but there are fewer than 100 native speakers today
Read the full article19 May 2022
Discovering a hidden dialect
A brand of English made it all the way to Iwo Jima – but linguists only found out thanks to a travel show on Japanese TV
Read the full article12 May 2022
Why Hispanos sound different
The Spanish spoken by descendants of the first Europeans to colonise the US diverges from that of Mexicans and Latinos
Read the full article05 May 2022
Settling down in unsettled lands
Charting the far-flung, uninhabited countries where English was the first language ever spoken
Read the full article28 April 2022
A city starved of its language
Following a former Canary’s flightpath to Krasnodar leads to an ominous sense of history repeating itself
Read the full article21 April 2022
English is an Indian language
It has been in use on the subcontinent since the 1600s and now has millions of native speakers
Read the full article07 April 2022
Britain’s little Bengali houses
The bungalow seems synonymous with the UK, but its origins can be traced back to north Indian languages
Read the full article31 March 2022
A word you may be interested in
It has two meanings and a fascinating new use. Now read on... if you can be bothered, that is
Read the full article24 March 2022
Russia’s push to crush Ukrainian
Peter The Great and Nicholas II were part of a centuries-long effort to suppress the language
Read the full article17 March 2022
Cancelling other cultures
PETER TRUDGILL on the schools that took children away from their homes and forced them to abandon their own language and practices
Read the full article10 March 2022
Greek roots of a seized city
PETER TRUDGILL explains how Catherine the Great’s ‘Greek Project’ led to the naming of Khersón
Read the full article03 March 2022
When Welsh was widespread
One region of England was still predominantly Welsh-speaking well into the 18th century – and its roots remain strong today
Read the full article24 February 2022
Silent witnesses to pomposity
Unpronounced letters in a word are often nothing to do with tradition, and merely the creation of snobbish scholars
Read the full article17 February 2022
A tribe lost in myths of time
The Picts, their practices and their fate are supposedly shrouded in mystery. The truth is somewhat different
Read the full article10 February 2022
Toffs didn’t learn the lingo
The Grand Tour offered the privileged a taste of Europe’s treasures, yet they failed to embrace foreign languages
Read the full article03 February 2022
Lingering effects of lingua franca
PETER TRUDGILL on how people with no common native language once communicated, and how that gave birth to the secret slang Polari
Read the full article27 January 2022
Rule by the few, not the many
PETER TRUDGILL examines the origins of words about who governs us, and finds the oligarchy has been around longer than you’d think
Read the full article20 January 2022
Don’t duck the Peking question
PETER TRUDGILL on why cities have different names... and how using one or the other doesn’t necessarily identify you as a vile colonialist.
Read the full article13 January 2022
Julian of Norwich, the jewel of East Anglia
PETER TRUDGILL on the East Anglian hermit thought to be the first woman to write a book in English
Read the full article06 January 2022
Changing times cloud the issue
PETER TRUDGILL on a word with many different meanings in the past 700 years
Read the full article16 December 2021
The reign of Spain is far from plain
PETER TRUDGILL on the rich seam of history behind Costa Rica’s languages.
Read the full article09 December 2021
The suffixes that gave women a bad name
PETER TRUDGILL on a law that displeased many people in the Czech Republic.
Read the full article02 December 2021
For Australians and New Zealanders, the proof is in the Pavlova pudding
PETER TRUDGILL on the origins of a tasty dessert – and the disagreement it causes in parts of the Southern Hemisphere.
Read the full article25 November 2021
Where the Greek language lingered
Alexander the Great spread the language far and wide. But where did it last the longest?
Read the full article18 November 2021
The false negatives the English language just can’t handle
PETER TRUDGILL on the linguistic device common in many European languages that can only go so far in English.
Read the full article11 November 2021
Let’s be smart, and reach out to Americanisms
PETER TRUDGILL on the seemingly unstoppable use of US words and phrases in our daily lives.
Read the full article04 November 2021
Vital signs: The story of Britain’s other language
The struggles, and triumphs, of British Sign Language.
Read the full article28 October 2021
Romancing Romanian and Moldavian tones
For political reasons, Moldovan and Romanian were considered separate languages. In fact, they are largely identical
Read the full article21 October 2021
The linguistic legacy of the buccaneering spirit
PETER TRUDGILL on a coastline and a corner of Colombia that seems forever English-speaking
Read the full article14 October 2021
What’s in a name? For these locations, an entire history
The English place names that offer revealing clues to the progress of invaders of these islands.
Read the full article07 October 2021
How Jamaican Patwa became the first language of whispering death
PETER TRUDGILL on the cricketer Michael Holding and Jamaican Patwa
Read the full article