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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Bellsybabble
rdfs:label
Bellsybabble
rdfs:comment
Bellsybabble is the name of the language of the Devil, mentioned by writer James Joyce in the following postscript to a letter (containing the story now known as "The Cat and the Devil"), which he wrote in 1936 to his four-year-old grandson: The devil mostly speaks a language of his own called Bellsybabble which he makes up himself as he goes along but when he is very angry he can speak quite bad French very well though some who have heard him say that he has a strong Dublin accent.
dcterms:subject
dbc:Fictional_languages dbc:Fiction_about_the_Devil dbc:James_Joyce
dbo:wikiPageID
50594803
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1118770335
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dbc:James_Joyce dbr:Finnegans_Wake dbr:Literary_text dbr:Pun dbr:John_Haiman_(linguist) dbr:Beelzebub dbc:Fiction_about_the_Devil dbr:Stephen_James_Joyce dbr:James_Joyce dbr:Tower_of_Babel dbr:C._George_Sandulescu dbr:Linguistic_performance dbr:Devil dbr:Linguistic_competence dbr:Linguistic_relativity n15:babble dbr:Giorgio_Melchiori dbr:Language dbr:Langue_and_parole dbc:Fictional_languages
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dbo:abstract
Bellsybabble is the name of the language of the Devil, mentioned by writer James Joyce in the following postscript to a letter (containing the story now known as "The Cat and the Devil"), which he wrote in 1936 to his four-year-old grandson: The devil mostly speaks a language of his own called Bellsybabble which he makes up himself as he goes along but when he is very angry he can speak quite bad French very well though some who have heard him say that he has a strong Dublin accent. The name "Bellsybabble" is a pun on Beelzebub, "babble" and Babel. Bellsybabble has variously been called a poly-language, a pluridialectal idiom and a ludic creation.
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wikipedia-en:Bellsybabble?oldid=1118770335&ns=0
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4774
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wikipedia-en:Bellsybabble