LINGUIST List 2.839

Wed 04 Dec 1991

Disc: Not

Editor for this issue: <>


Directory

  • Monica Macaulay, NOT
  • Fan mail from some flounder?, Re: 2.828 Queries: Macs, Historical Linguistics, Paper Search
  • , sarcastic post-affirmative NOT
  • Stephen Ryberg, origins of free-standing _Not_
  • "CHARLOTTE S BASHAM", Re: 2.828 Queries: Macs, Historical Linguistics, Paper Search

    Message 1: NOT

    Date: Sun, 1 Dec 91 13:08:12 -0500
    From: Monica Macaulay <macaulayj.cc.purdue.edu>
    Subject: NOT
    Re Larry Horn's query: to my knowledge that "Not" originated from "Wayne's World," a skit on Saturday Night Live. It's supposed to be a public access program hosted by these two high school boys. It's pretty hilarious, actually. But to tell you the truth, I've never been sure if they originated that use of "Not" or if it was part of teen slang that they then picked up and popularized.

    Message 2: Re: 2.828 Queries: Macs, Historical Linguistics, Paper Search

    Date: Sun, 1 Dec 1991 20:31 EST
    From: Fan mail from some flounder? <SDFNCRritvax.isc.rit.edu>
    Subject: Re: 2.828 Queries: Macs, Historical Linguistics, Paper Search
    With regard to Larry Horn's query about XXXXX. Not. I've seen this on TV on Saturday Night Live, specifically on the "Wayne's World" segments. Although "Wayne's World" takes place in Illinois, my suspicion is that it's a california-ism, though unfortunately I am not around California teenagers enough to confirm the suspicion. Susan Fischer

    Message 3: sarcastic post-affirmative NOT

    Date: Mon, 02 Dec 91 09:27 CST
    From: <TB0NRN1NIU.bitnet>
    Subject: sarcastic post-affirmative NOT
    Sarcastic post-affirmative NOT seems to have been popularized by the movie BILL AND TED'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE and a take-off on it or the type of talk it make popular in the WAYNE'S WORLD sketch on Saturday Night Live. My students insist, however, that they used the construction before the movie came out, so the film was recording a current pattern rather than inventing something new. Undergraduates tell me a second speaker may intrude a post-posed NOT following an affirmative statement by some other speaker as well. Either way it forces the listener to go back and re-hear the original statement. I don't think it's significantly different than a sarcastic NOT MUCH post-posed to a negative statement like the following, which has no special dialect or register feeling to it for me. Al doesn't smoke any more -pause- not MUCH.

    Message 4: origins of free-standing _Not_

    Date: Mon, 2 Dec 91 11:19:51 CST
    From: Stephen Ryberg <rybergcasbah.acns.nwu.edu>
    Subject: origins of free-standing _Not_
    Larry Horn asks about (among other things) the origins of the free-standing _Not_ following an affirmative statement. For what it's worth, I first heard this used on the "Wayne's World" skits of Saturday Night Live perhaps a year or more ago. It is also featured in a current Budweiser commercial starring an elderly lady (from Nashville?) who plays the quitar and the former guitarist for The Stray Cats, when the former says to the latter, during a strange dream of his, "You're pretty good. Not!" Sorry I have no real natural data to supply. Steve Ryberg Northwestern

    Message 5: Re: 2.828 Queries: Macs, Historical Linguistics, Paper Search

    Date: Tue, 03 Dec 91 23:38:44 -0900
    From: "CHARLOTTE S BASHAM" <FFCSBALASKA.BITNET>
    Subject: Re: 2.828 Queries: Macs, Historical Linguistics, Paper Search
    Larry Horn asked about the use of NOT as sarcastic denial. I can't provide a verbatim example, but I know that in conversations with my 18 year old son, he has responded with NOT to statements that I have made (lots of times, in fact). I'll pay more attention to it and report in. Charley Basham FFCSBALASKA