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Category Archives: metaphor
Hidden: Advent Word 2
Metaphor was my guide as I pondered today’s assigned word. First, my thoughts strayed to one of the Bible verses I memorized as a girl in Sunday school. It was the very early 1960s in a very Protestant church, so … Continue reading →
Posted in Advent, Bible, church, language, metaphor, religion
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Tagged #AdventWord, Advent, Leonard Cohen, light, metaphor, religion
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Wind: Advent Word 1
Christina Rossetti, the fervent proponent of High Anglicanism who gave us #112 in the Episcopal hymnal, the haunting carol “In the Bleak Midwinter,” also wrote the brief poem below, often anthologized for children: Who has seen the wind? Neither I … Continue reading →
To the Tops of Many Mountains: My 50th Class Reunion
Part 1: Making Ready for the Journey At some moments we experience complete unity within us and around us. This may happen when we stand on a mountaintop and are captivated by the view. It may happen when we witness … Continue reading →
Wonder: My New Year’s Resolution
Among the saddest lines in literature are the ones with which Nick Carraway describes his last glance at the sprawling estate on Long Island from which Gatsby watched the green light on Daisy’s dock: As the moon rose higher the … Continue reading →
Posted in Arizona, art, creativity, Globe, memories, metaphor, narrative, photography, poetry, wonder
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Tagged Arizona, Globe, identity, language, literature, meaning, memories, mot juste, photography, poetry, word, writing
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Grammar, Meet God
Although I care deeply about language and am passionately interested in its origins and characteristics, I have no claims as a linguist. Therefore, what follows comes more from my heart than my head–mostly emotion tempered with a bit of knowledge … Continue reading →
Posted in church, current events, history, language, metaphor, politics, religion
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Tagged Book of Common Prayer, gender, grammar, language, lingistics, meaning, metaphor, politics, religion, semantics, word
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Hope Is a Thing
Twenty years ago today, so the legend goes, the hopeless step-grandmother of a wild child saw a red sign on a gray door: “Enter Here in Peace.” Though the parlous state of her soul belied the mode of entry, she took … Continue reading →
Shared Experience, Shared Language: A Review of Lakoff and Johnson on Metaphor
Each of my efforts to write about George Lakoff and Mark Johnson’s Metaphors We Live By uncannily comprises a demonstration of its thesis. As I started to plan my review, I wrote, I am late to the dance—referring to the … Continue reading →
It Quacks Like a Duck
I have learned many important lessons since beginning this blog three months ago, and I have relearned many others. Already this morning, I have experienced one of each (in reverse order): I know a minuscule amount; and Amazon Prime is … Continue reading →