

Mark Peters is a word-lover who has written about language for Mental Floss, Psychology Today, and Verbatim: The Language Quarterly. Mark gets very excited when he discovers words like "ectoplasmgasm," "nincompoopitude," "smasho-crasho," "come-hither-y," and "spokesfembot" in the wild, so he immortalizes them in his Wordlustitude dictionary. Mark also writes a language column for Babble, a magazine for urban parents. In addition to his word-related pursuits, Mark can juggle five balls, but he is regretfully unable to balance a brick on his nose. He lives in Chicago with his rat terrier Monkey, who can run faster than any other dog in Lincoln Park, swear to Zeus.
Culture
"Mind-bottling," "jar-dropping," and "lame-man's terms" are all eggcorns—a type of common and somewhat logical language goof named after a misspelling of "acorn." — read more
Contributors: Mark Peters and Kim Scafuro
010: The China Issue - Mar 18 2008
Culture
Mark Peters on the Colbert suffix. — read more
Contributors: Mark Peters and Jenny Mörtsell
007: High Tech/Low Tech - Oct 03 2007