Nabokov's Language Games
Vladimir Nabokov didn’t just write beautifully—he heard language. This video explores how his obsession with phonetics, syntax, and multilingual puns shaped Lolita, Pnin, and Pale Fire. From hidden rhymes to linguistic riddles, we trace how Nabokov turned language itself into a character. If you’ve ever felt there was more beneath the surface of his prose, you were right. Leave a like and Subscribe if you enjoyed - and please do drop your thoughts below !!!

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Chomsky was wrong.They taught me a lie.

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Vladimir Nabokov discusses "Lolita" part 1 of 2

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An Upper-Class Southern British Accent, 1673 - 2023

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1986: How to Spot the Upper Class | That's Life! | BBC Archive

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The Greatest Writer Most People Have Never Heard Of

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Tarkovsky on Bresson, Bach, Tolstoy, Leonardo and Shakespeare

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Linguistics vs Musicology: They're Basically Identical

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ASMR Best Triggers For Sleep Collection (No Talking) 3 Hours of Tapping & Scratching

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Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

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The Loneliest Philosopher

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Slavoj Zizek — The Liberal Fantasy of Multiculturalism

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The Day You Stop Romanticizing People — Carl Jung

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From Old English to Modern American English in One Monologue

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Why French sounds so unlike other Romance languages

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Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov (Why Do We Value This Work?)

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Ivan’s Argument That Shatters Faith – The Brothers Karamazov

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Carl Jung: Face to Face - 1959 Interview (Colorized & Remastered)

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You Don’t Understand How Language Works

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Oscar Wilde documentary

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