Dude, to rock is a verb and has always been a verb: the wind rocked the cradle, the waves rocked the ship, the ship rolled on the sea, the bluesman and his woman rocked and rolled all night... this is not a linguistic transformation at all. The transformation was turning the two verbs (rock and roll) into the adjective "rock and roll." You didn't think they were talking about a stone and a muffin, did you?
Sure, sure. I will be more specific. The verb "to rock" in the musical sense does not really imply "to physically oscillate back and forth". There are several transformations from "to rock" (the cradle), "rock and roll" (adjective for music originating from you-know-what), "Rock and roll" (noun for a style of music) and back to the verb "to rock" (me like a hurricane).
All nitpicking over an admittedly confusing example. My point was that some nouns usefully take on a verb form as a way to simplify or clarify expression, and that "to intern" is acceptable in this respect.
This is not okay for all noun-to-verb transformations. In the studio, we are happy to say that we miced* an amplifier. It is a bit more awkward to talk about EQ'ing the vocals and it sounds silly to claim that you just finished guitaring a sesh. What's the distinction? Probably some mix of cultural acceptance, expressive convenience and whether or not it sounds plainly stupid. Whatever the criteria, “to intern” has passed.
I think making nouns into verbs is pretty bad, unless you use proper nouns
I draw the line when the use of the proper noun says more about the person referenced than it provides insight into the action described. If I say "You really Thomased me over with that Lotto ticket deal" and you say, "What does Thomased mean?” I'm being needlessly stylistic by explaining to you that Thomas was my ex-roommate who stuck me with an outrageous phone bill. Naturally, though, a defense of the right wing's correct use of language would accurately be described as Safiring back at you.
You guys are all so post-ironic. It's killing me.
Do you mean post as in following the antecedent or post as in a noun describing entries to a message board?
Intern8033, if I saw a movie called "2 DICKS, 1 HOLE!!!” what would be the best way for me to describe that on this board? Moreover, what about by ssn# query?
= Justin, active intern
*How do people weigh in on the correct spelling and punctuation of “to mic”?