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Key Features:
One of those rare books that offers a serious examination of a TV cult phenomenon - appealing to fans and thinkers alike
- If you have not heard of Buffy then where have you been for the last seven years?
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer is watched by millions all around the world, and has thousands of unofficial fan websites
- In the 20th Century Star Trek introduced the world to new words, in the 21st Century Buffy the Vampire Slayer has taken the youth culture and their use of English Language to another level
- The book reflects on the power of television and its
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Produktbeschreibung
Key Features:
One of those rare books that offers a serious examination of a TV cult phenomenon - appealing to fans and thinkers alike
- If you have not heard of Buffy then where have you been for the last seven years?
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer is watched by millions all around the world, and has thousands of unofficial fan websites
- In the 20th Century Star Trek introduced the world to new words, in the 21st Century Buffy the Vampire Slayer has taken the youth culture and their use of English Language to another level
- The book reflects on the power of television and its effects on society

Description:
Michael Adams begins his book with a synopsis of the programme's history and a defence of ephemeral language. He then moves to the main body of the work: a detailed glossary of slayer slang, annotated with actual dialogue and recorded in the style accepted by the American Dialect Society. The book concludes with a bibliography and a lengthy index, a guide to sources (novels based on the show, magazine articles about the show, and language culled from the official posting board) and an appendix of slang-making suffixes. Introduced by Jane Espenson, one of the show's most inventive writers (and herself a linguist), Slayer Slang offers a quintessential example of contemporary youth culture serving as a vehicle for slang.
A few examples from the Slayer Slang glossary:
bitca n [AHD4 bitch n in sense 2.a + a] Bitch 1997 Sep 15 Whedon When She Was Bad "[Willow:] 'I mean, why else would she be acting like such a b-i-t-c-h?' [Giles:] 'Willow, I think we're all a little old to be spelling things out.' [Xander:] 'A bitca?'"break and enterish adj [AHD4 sv breaking and entering n + -ish suff in sense 2.a] Suitable for crime 1999 Mar 16 Petrie Enemies "I'll go home and stock up on weapons, slip into something a little more break and enterish."
carbon-dated adj [fr. AHD4 carbondating + -ed] Very out of date 1997 Mar 10 Whedon Welcome to the Hellmouth "[Buffy:] 'Deal with that outfit for a moment.' [Giles:] 'It's dated?' [Buffy:] 'It's carbon-dated.'"
cuddle-monkey n [AHD4 cuddle v + monkey n in sense 2, by analogy fr. RHHDAS (also DAS3 and NTC) sv cuddle bunny 'an affectionate, passionate, or sexually attractive young woman'] Male lover 1998 Feb 10 Noxon Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered "Every woman in Sunnydale wants to make me her cuddle-monkey." [Xander]
Autorenporträt
MICHAEL ADAMS, Professor of English, Albright College