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152 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3525
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Title: HPR3525: Battling with English - part 4
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3525/hpr3525.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 00:58:25
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio Episode 3525 for Friday 4th of February 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Pat Ling with English Part 4, It is hosted by Dave Morris and
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is about 15 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The server is, some confusion with English laurels, strange language changes.
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Hello everybody, this is Dave Morris and welcome to Haka Public Radio.
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So today's show is number four in a series which is called, Pat Ling with English.
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I talk about things to do with spelling and grammar and stuff like that.
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And this time I'm looking at some words that have singular and plural forms which are very
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different and a bit unusual too and they lead to confusion. As a follow-up, although I think it
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might take a fair bit of time on the first one, but another subject that I want to just touch on
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is a couple of ways in which English is evolving. And I think there some of them are a bit strange
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and a bit senseless actually. In other words, I don't approve, but you see what you think.
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Just on a personal note, I look in through the notes I put together for this show,
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I had started in 2019, but unfortunately COVID, people messed up my productivity for the next two
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years, which is ridiculous when you think about it. But I'm hoping that I can now get back into
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being more productive again. So let's see how we go. You might never hear from me again, of course.
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Right, let's start. We're looking first at nouns that end in IS. And these words are usually
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derived from Greek. So they don't conform to the usual pattern of writing singles and plurals.
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I made a little table of a few and I've shown the singular form, the plural form,
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and then listed a number of common mistakes. Start with thesis. That's a thing, a sort of paper
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that you write. It's part of your education probably. Thesis is the singular. The plural is
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Thesis, T-H-E-S-E-S. What you often see, what I often see, because I'm alert to these things,
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is the word thesis says, in other words, take thesis, put E-S on the end of it, because
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it's quite common to do that in English, pluralisation, but it's not right. The other one I've seen,
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surprisingly often, is one where people get confused with plurals and possessives,
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where they put thesis with an apostrophe on the end of it. That doesn't make it a plural at all.
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Doesn't make it anything real. And the table I've marked the mistakes with them,
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they're in italics, and I've put little crosses beside them just to remind you that those are wrong.
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The other one I hear a lot of listening to podcasts and stuff, is the word parenthesis,
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the round brackets that you use in often, I mean, it's because people are talking about programming,
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languages and stuff, parenthesis is the singular. So you have, often you have an open bracket and
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a closed bracket, and each one is a parenthesis. If you want to refer to the two of them,
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the open and the close, then the word is parenthesis, ends in T-H-E-S-E-S, parenthesis. Now what
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I've heard some people doing is assuming that parenthesis with a plural, but then they take off the
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S from the end of it and say, okay, the singular must be parenthesis, just with no S on the end.
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That's not the way these plurals work. Parenthesis, parenthesis, things to remember. The other thing
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that I see is people using parenthesis for both the singular and plural. So this expression is
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enclosed in parenthesis. No, parenthesis, because it's one at the beginning, one at the end. So yeah,
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parenthesis, I suppose it's not that useful a term in programming languages, because they usually
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paired. So it is confusing. I understand it is confusing, but hopefully some of this chitchat will
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help you remember these things. Next one is crisis. Again, conforms to the singular plural pattern,
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crisis and crises. You see people writing crisis says, and nemesis, and nemesis, and again,
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nemesis says is often used as the plural. One I heard recently was difficulty between
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the singular axis and the plural axes. Now, it's again like parenthesis. Some people mistake
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the word axes. Well, they don't mistake it. They take it as the plural, which it is, but then they
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assume that to make it singular, you take the S off the end. So it's axi, but that spells ax.
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And that's not what we're talking about. We're talking about an axis. Yeah, I know English is
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confusing. If you're a learner of English, and it's a second or third language or something,
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then these things are really going to annoy you, I think. But yeah, I've often given students advice
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when I worked in university. Students who hadn't got English as a first language, and they were
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struggling with some of these things. So yeah, just to summarize, then a mistake that's often made
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is that people were ES on the end of a singular form to make the plural, or so if thesis says.
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But the rule is that the IS at the end is replaced by ES. And the thing about parenthesis must have
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a singular form, parenthesis is that I heard that so many times lately. Once you hear it,
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well, if you have a pedantic mind like mine, and once you hear it, you're going to keep on
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detecting it. And the person I noticed with the Axis Axi error was somebody on our YouTube
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video, and they were talking about I think 3D printing emails. Okay, so let's leave that one. One more.
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I'm not going to do too many of these because they can be overwhelming. So these are nouns that end
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in an A, and these are so-called irregular plural, which sometimes end with A-E. In fact, usually
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formally end with A-E. But I think the world of English speakers have started to hate that stuff
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and try to move away from it. But I thought it was worth raising it at least. I was taught to use
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the A-E form, which we'll look at in a minute. So in my mind, that is right, and everything else is
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wrong. But I'm a bit of an absolutist and it comes these things so be flexible, I guess, but
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but not too flexible. Anyway, I've got a list here, another table, where I've shown the plurals,
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but I've shown an irregular form, or at least a less formal form, let's say, but they are used
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in other contexts. So let's look at these. There's a few more this time. And Tenna,
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think of you to stick on your radio, or if you're an insect, you'd have one too, probably.
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And Tenna is end in an A, but if you want to speak about multiple and Ten-E, then it ends in A-E.
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Some people use the word and Tenna's, which has become more acceptable. But if you were writing
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a biological paper or something, and we'll be tied you for writing and Tenna's,
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somebody's going to reject it on that basis, I would guess. The common mistake is to
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use and Tenna as a plural. This insect has two and Tenna. No, and Ten-E, or and Tenna's, if you must.
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Again, with Alga, which is the biological name for seaweed and other green things going to see,
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some unicellular, some much bigger. Plurals, Algi, A-O-G-A-E, or Algis, which is interesting.
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That sounds seems to be the worst of both worlds, actually, though. Not Algas, but Algis. And again,
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Alga is not a plural, so you can't say this bucket of Alga. What you could say,
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that would be wrong. I'll go through these a little bit quicker because you probably don't want
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me to dwell on them too much. Formular, the plural is formulae, but you do find formulas as well.
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Formular is not a plural. Lava, the plural is larvae, but lava as L-A-R-V-A-S is also found.
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I'm not sure whether it's acceptable. Acceptable to me is probably what I mean. Nebula,
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usually here in astronomy circles, the plural is nebulae. Nebulaes is not an accepted form,
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according to all the sources I've found, anyway. A nebula is not a plural. I do hear astronomers
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talking about the such and such nebulae, and then they drop into, oh, the thing in the thing,
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nebulaes, I've heard that, or nebula, more commonly. So they seem to be confused, but what's
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a singular in the plural? That's really the point of this podcast. Nova, which again is an
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astronomical word, though it does have other meanings. Nova is singular, no V is the plural,
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but you also see novas, and novas should never be used as a plural. Vertibra, given away my biological
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roots, you know, I'm afraid plural is vertebrae, and vertebras is, you will come across, but vertebra
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is not a plural. Last one, another biological one, pupa, the thing that the bottom of the lower
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of moth makes before it turns into bottom of the lower moth from a caterpillar, is as plural of pupa,
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AE, and pupas is also found, but pupa is never a plural. So there are more plurals that are
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confusing, but I'm going to stop there. But as a biology student, I encountered words like
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verbosis, which is a Greek drug word, meaning a feeding tube, such as an insect moth part,
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or an elephant's trunk, though I've not heard many people talk about elephant's trunks as
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verbosis. It's a verbosis. We were taught that the plural was verbosides. So that's a nice complicated
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one, but just to warn you that there's some other nasty things out there. But nowadays people say
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verbosis is, sounds horrible, but there you go. So that's enough of that for the moment. So here's
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me on the subject of language evolution, and I'm saying here that I'm being somewhat ancient,
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and stuck in my ways, probably I don't approve of these. See what you think. First one I noticed
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some number of years ago is the use of ease in a sentence, so it is repeated. Now it's acceptable
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to do that. If the sentence consists of a couple of phrases like, the question is, comma,
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is it snowing? Well, that's fine. You've got two eases there, but the one's just saying that
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here's a question, and this is what it is, and the question is, is it snowing? So the first
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is, ends the phrase, and the second starts the question. But you do find people saying things
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like, the problem is that it's snowing, and you don't find it in written form. It's not in my experience,
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but it's very common in speech on mainly on TV and radio in my experience. I don't know anybody
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personally who does that, but maybe it's a Britishism that's, no, it's not, and I've heard it in
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American podcasts and stuff as well. I do recall people writing to the BBC in the earlier times,
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and this appeared saying why there was doubling of the word is in stuff, and the response came back,
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oh yeah, the guy was just hesitating, he wasn't sure what to say next, which happens, you know,
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we do say things with a hesitation stopping for a thought there. But I don't think that was
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the right reply, because there's everywhere, no. It can't be that sort of verbal tick in all cases.
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Second one is the expression, honing in, H-O-N-I-N-G. So I think this expression, and I've found
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other people who agree with this, that this is a mishearing or mispronunciation of the phrase,
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honing in, honing in. I'm not sure if this is, I mentioned here, a mon degree, where this is where
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people hear a thing and misunderstand what's being said, which he calls it, a mishearing or misinterpretation
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of a phrase in a way that gives it new meaning. And if you follow the mon degree link in the notes here,
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you'll find some wonderful things. Desmond Decker and the Aces song,
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Mi Israelite, was taken by many people to be, or at least there's a joke about it,
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sounding like Mi ears are a light, which I find funny. There was even a TV ad in the UK
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using that joke. Anyway, I think mishearing stuff is a bit, I'm not sure I agree with it,
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it seems a poor excuse, because honing H-O-N-I means to sharpen or narrow to a point, and that's fine,
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that's great. But I don't find the use in context where honing was the original, because otherwise
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we're going to have things like honing missiles. They were called honing missiles, the ones that
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you pointed them in direction, and I said go there, now, program to go to a place, and they went
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there, they honed in on that place. But honing, what's that, what's sharpening got to do with
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missiles? And they'll also be honing pigeons, originally they were honing pigeons, because they,
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when you let them go, it was a sport, it probably still is in the UK. You have honing pigeons,
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you take them out to some remote place, and then let them out, and then they find the way home,
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and there's a race between different competitors, for which pigeon returns home first,
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wherever they live. These are pet pigeons, or, you know, kept by pigeon fanciers, as they call them.
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But honing, what? And the other thing is you'd find, instead of honing in, well, I've got an example
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in a minute, I think, then you'd be using sharpening in, so it means that honing, honing, and sharpening
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would be synonyms, if that was made any sense. So there would be expressions such as the detective
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was sharpening in on the criminal, in other words, well, as an alternative to honing in on the criminal.
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So in such a world, I say, I believe in my blunt chisels out on the birdtabre, in the hopes of
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honing pigeons pass by and sharpen them. On that note, or terrible joke, I'll leave it. Anyway,
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I hope you found that interesting or useful, or even irritating. Let me know what you think,
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and catch you next time. Okay, bye!
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You've been listening to Hecker Public Radio at Hecker Public Radio.org. Today's show was
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