The language report is the frontline account of what we're saying and how we're saying it. From street slang to rhyming slang; from sporting language to cyberspeak; from text talk to the language of war, it's an enlightening collection of intriguing facts and observations compiled from the evidence of the world's largest language monitoring programme, at Oxford University Press.
Dent was educated at the Marist Convent in Ascot, an independent Roman Catholic day school. She went on to Somerville College, Oxford for her B.A. in modern languages, then to Princeton University for her master's degree in German.
Dent is serves as the resident lexicographer and adjudicator for the letters rounds on long-running British game show Countdown. At the time she began work on Countdown in 1992, she had just started working for the Oxford University Press on producing English dictionaries, having previously worked on bilingual dictionaries.
I find it fascinating to see the shifts and alterations that English has taken over the years. Dent's 2003 report includes a whole slew of examinations of the ways in which language changes, some that are fairly straightforward and others that are surprising, and yet others that are downright discouraging. It was also interesting since it is written from a British perspective (including a chapter on the peculiarly untransfered Rhyming Slang for which I have no context and am completely baffled in my American ignorance), and presents snapshots from both sides of the Atlantic. Plus, it is obvious that the author has a keen grasp and appreciation for one of the most important cultural influences on language stemming from the late 90's: Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
- from the jacket: "The Language Report is the front-line account of what we're saying and how we're saying it. From street lang to rhyming slang; from sporting language to cyber-speak; from text talk to the language of war, it's an enlightening collection of intriguing facts and observations compiled from the evidence of the world's largest language monitoring programme, at Oxford University Press."