亚洲网紅露点

Cinnamon 亚洲网紅露点s: Authors’ Most Reused 亚洲网紅露点s

Cinnamon words

Guitarists have signature riffs, rappers their ad-libs, pop stars their dance moves. And authors? Well, they have words.No, duh,听 you may be thinking. But there are some authors who have a tendency to use certain words statistically more often than others. These are cinnamon words, as data journalist Ben Blatt memorably dubbed them in his 2017 book, Nabokov鈥檚 Favorite 亚洲网紅露点 is Mauve: What the Numbers Reveal About the Classics, Bestsellers, and Our Own Writing.

Here are 10 cinnamon words or expressions consistently used by some of our most beloved authors throughout their stories. Look closely鈥攎aybe you already have recognized a few!

Ray Bradbury: "cinnamon"

First off, why cinnamon words? Ben Blatt found that Ray Bradbury frequently used the word听cinnamon across his novels and short stories in descriptions of everything from roads to Egyptian tombs.

Perhaps that’s not surprising. According to the author himself,听cinnamon was Ray Bradbury鈥檚 favorite word; it conjured up memories of his grandmother鈥檚 pantry.听

Cinnamon wasn鈥檛 the only spice-related word Bradbury flavored his sentences with. Vanilla, spearmint, and听nutmeg all appear at higher-than-normal rates in Bradbury’s oeuvre.听His grandmother must鈥檝e had some pantry.

J.K. Rowling: "pocketed it"

J.K. Rowling appears to be a bit more Slytherin than she would like to admit. Despite the author claiming it to be more fiction than fact, back in 2016 rumors surfaced of a feud between Rowling and Stephen Fry, the famed British comedian who narrated the audiobooks of her Harry Potter series.

After purportedly dismissing a then-obscure Rowling, Stephen Fry apparently set himself up for some revenge when it became clear he struggled with recording one phrase in particular: pocketed it. Even if this feud is fantasy, the phrase pocketed it鈥in which characters place certain items, mostly their wands, in their pockets鈥攄oes pop up quite often in the Harry Potter books.

J.R.R. Tolkien: "gold"

J.R.R. Tolkien, famed for his听Lord of the Rings fantasyseries, had some serious language skills. Every name and word in his works were carefully crafted from his linguistic and literary knowledge. It is no wonder, then, that an entire website dedicated to the analysis of the use of words in Tolkien鈥檚 works,听Emil Johansson’s听,听launched in 2012.

Along with perhaps more obvious words like听elves and dragons, gold was one generously sprinkled across all Tolkien鈥檚 major works. The Fellowship of the Ring takes the cake, where听gold is used 144 times.

Agatha Christie: "murder"

This should come as a surprise to no one. According to the International Crime Fiction Research Group, the word murder听made it into the titles of 17 of Christie’s 66 works鈥攋ust the titles alone.听What’s surprising is that it was听only 17 times!

The runners-up were听death and mystery, which leaves this case closed.

Stephen King: female characters

Stephen King is best known as the dark genius behind demonic clowns, prom nights gone wrong, and all things Maine. What many may not have realized is his proclivity听for female main characters and titles.

One avid fanread each of the 169 works Stephen King published under the name Stephen King and crunched these stats:听13 percent of his novels are named after women and 26 percent have women stationed as the main characters.听

George R.R. Martin: "black as pitch"

In his statistical analysis of cinnamon words, Ben Blatt noted how often authors used 肠濒颈肠丑茅蝉听(e.g., strong as an ox), even though they are supposed to steer clear of them like potholes.

George R.R. Martinauthor of the听Song of Ice and Fire听series popularly known as Game of Thrones,听after the title of the first novelwas guilty. The culprit? Black as pitch, a frequent phrase in his epic.听Not a surprise, judging how Martin treats most of his characters.

James Patterson: "believe it or not"

Another clich茅-happy author based on Blatt鈥檚 analysis?听Thriller novelist听James Patterson.

We might crown Patterson the King of Clich茅s, as he averages about 160 of them per 100,000 words. Believe it or not is most common, making it, believe it or not, the clich茅 of 肠濒颈肠丑茅蝉.

Neil Gaiman: "ineffable"

When choosing a word to associate with Neil Gaiman, one would be tempted to pick听versatile. The author has produced a wide range of works, ranging from children鈥檚 novels to fantasy comics to episodes of Doctor Who. When asked what his favorite word was, the author himself offered up听ineffable.

In fact, he liked the word so much, he and fellow fantasy author Terry Pratchett co-wrote a whole book, Good Omens, apparently inspired by the concept of ineffable. It’s about the birth of the son of Satan, which is something only Pratchett and Gaiman could put into words.听听

Jane Austen: "civility"

With all her sense and sensibility, it鈥檚 no surprise that one of Jane Austen鈥檚 cinnamon words is听civility. How perfect, given how Austen wrote about鈥攁nd took apart鈥攖he means and manners of late 18th-century British gentry.

Austen’s other two cinnamon words,听according to Blatt,听are fancying and imprudence. Consider our pearls not-clutched in the slightest. 听

Vladimir Nabokov: "mauve"

Just as Blatt’s book title promises, Russian author Vladimir Nabokov鈥檚听cinnamon word was indeed听mauve. The Lolita author used the word 44 times more often than expected.听

Blatt observes, though, that Nabokov had synesthesia, “a condition where one’s sense experiences are mixed.” For Nabokov, words and sounds made him see colors.

Apparently … he heard a lot of pale purple鈥攏ot to be confused with Pale Fire.

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亚洲网紅露点 of the Day

Can you guess the definition?

quintessential

[ kwin-tuh-sen-shuhl ]

Can you guess the definition?

亚洲网紅露点 of the day
quintessential

[ kwin-tuh-sen-shuhl ]