Global Information Lookup Global Information

My postillion has been struck by lightning information


This English etching from 1793 shows a postillion mounted on the front left horse

"My postillion has been struck by lightning", "our postillion has been struck by lightning", and other variations on the same pattern, are often given as examples of the ridiculous phrases supposed to have been found in phrase books or language instruction in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The word postillion may occur in its alternative spelling postilion.

Although various forms of the sentence are widely cited, the exact wording and the context in which it is said to have originally been used vary. For example, a teaching manual attributes it to a Portuguese-English phrasebook (possibly alluding to English as She Is Spoke):

The phrase-book for Portuguese learners of English which included the often-quoted and bizarre sentence 'Pardon me, but your postillion has been struck by lightning' demonstrates a total lack of sense of context: who can have said this, to whom and in what circumstances?[1]

By contrast a linguistics textbook mentions the supposedly "apocryphal" phrase during a description of foreign language teaching in "the schoolrooms of Europe at the close of the nineteenth century":

[S]entences—especially constructed to contain only the grammar and vocabulary which had already been covered—were laboriously translated, in writing, into and out of the student's first language. Such sentences, often bizarrely remote from any conceivable use, have been the occasion for jokes ever since. We have probably all heard references to the apocryphal "My postilion has been struck by lightning" and the infamous plume de ma tante.[2]

  1. ^ Broughton, Geoffrey; Christopher Brumfit; Roger Flavell; Roger D. Wilde; Anita Pincas (1988). Teaching English as a Foreign Language (2nd ed.). London; New York: Routledge. p. 41. ISBN 0-415-05882-1.; emphasis added
  2. ^ Cook, Guy (2003). Applied Linguistics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 31–32. ISBN 0-19-437598-6.; emphasis added

and 7 Related for: My postillion has been struck by lightning information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8328 seconds.)

My postillion has been struck by lightning

Last Update:

"My postillion has been struck by lightning", "our postillion has been struck by lightning", and other variations on the same pattern, are often given...

Word Count : 1495

Postilion

Last Update:

postillon de Lonjumeau, an 1836 French comic opera by Adolphe Adam. "My postillion has been struck by lightning". A comical phrase supposedly found in old-fashioned...

Word Count : 839

Dirk Bogarde

Last Update:

Starting with a first volume A Postillion Struck by Lightning (an allusion to the phrase My postillion has been struck by lightning), he wrote a series of 15...

Word Count : 4559

Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook

Last Update:

constructed languages. My postillion has been struck by lightning How a Portuguese-to-English Phrasebook Became a Cult Comedy Sensation, by Tucker Leighty-Phillips...

Word Count : 876

Phrase book

Last Update:

unwittingly incompetent translation. The expression "My postillion has been struck by lightning", supposedly included in some phrasebooks, is used to...

Word Count : 740

I Can Eat Glass

Last Update:

languages. It became an Internet meme. My hovercraft is full of eels My postillion has been struck by lightning Finegan, Edward (2004). Language: its structure...

Word Count : 474

English as She Is Spoke

Last Update:

Japp "my personal copy of 'The English as She Should be Spoken.'" Engrish, broken English common among Asian learners My postillion has been struck by lightning...

Word Count : 1796

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net