18 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2023
    1. The Compass of Zettelkasten Thinking.

      Notice the naming/productization of this idea: The Compass of Zettelkasten Thinking which Fei-Ling Tseng labels a "method" in the following line.

      The comments on the piece seem to underline this.

      The general idea is also far from new, so people are obviously ignoring the history of the space as they productize it.

  2. Oct 2020
    1. we are the half-destroyed instruments that once held to a course the water-eaten log the fouled compass

      The author here use metaphor that compares half destroyed instruments to female, it means females have gotten a lot damages and hurt in human soceity, but actually females used to be the leader of the soceity. Now, females are like fouled compass and water eaten log.

    1. the plangent harps of the Babylonian bondage, as the white cowries clustered like manacles on the drowned women,

      I think that the author here uses metaphor to compare the white cowries as white people and drowned women as the poor slave to describe an image that a group of people enslave another group of people inhumanely. I think here the author might ues metonymy rhetorical figure also on this image to refer to slavery time in America.

    1. As Lightning to the Children eased With explanation kind The Truth must dazzle gradually Or every man be blind —

      I think the author here means that it is very easy and simply to teach children in this "circuit lies" that only display part of the truth so that it can mislead and control the mind of children, but ,as time passby, the full truth must emerge to sight of children gradually ,and it will strike the original view like dazzel. In face, it always happens throughout most childhood of people, thats why parent family education affects children growing a lot. They learn the part of truth from their parent mostly.

    2. And asks a Vane, the way — Much Gesture, from the Pulpit — Strong Hallelujahs roll —

      I guess that Dickinson means asking a way by a vane, it just likes a gesture from a pulpit, many people call Hallelujahs strongly to response to Pulpit, but it actully seems to a vane that gives a gesture with no sense but wind.

  3. Sep 2020
    1. Make plain the reason tortured Tantalus Is baited by the fickle fruit, declare If merely brute caprice dooms Sisyphus To struggle up a never-ending stair.

      Cullen compares black people suffering like Tantalus and Sisphus to display how suffered they are. They struggle up a never-ending stair as punished, black people work as hard labor too.

    2. So will my page be colored that I write? Being me, it will not be white.

      Hughes thinks the page he writes is labeled colored under discrimination by his instructor, his page is not white due to his color. However, everything is actually same for all colors people, the differences come from personal bias. Hughes believes he gets English B for his color.

  4. Nov 2017
  5. files.umwblogs.org files.umwblogs.org
    1. verbal hygiene

      one's tendency to meddle in matters of others' language use

  6. Oct 2017
    1. Annotated Bibliography of Southern American English

      Another possible source, see highlighted text above

  7. Sep 2017
  8. files.umwblogs.org files.umwblogs.org
    1. diglossia

      2 distinct dialects, one of high and one low variety, no one uses high in convo

    2. domain

      family, religious, education, etc

  9. Aug 2017
  10. files.umwblogs.org files.umwblogs.org
    1. Please complete Exercise 5 on page

      How many varieties do you use on a normal weekday? -Casual with friends -More "standard" English with professors -Nice but guarded with strangers. I use "standard" and guarded with most people I'm not so familiar with, have been conditioned to use standard American English at home and in school.

    2. referential v. affective function

      whether purpose of speech is to convey facts/information about what's being discussed or the speaker's attitude toward that info

    3. formality

      how formal or casual is the setting or conversation type?

    4. status

      relative status of speakers - impacts how you speak

    5. social solidarity v. distance

      how well we know someone. high solidarity means intimacy

    6. linguistic repertoire

      Your options, a range of varieties from which you choose how to speak in a certain context

    7. variety

      A set of linguistic forms used under specific social circumstances. Also "code"