DiscoverThe Box of OdditiesLinguistic Ghost Limbs & the Melon Heads of Connecticut
Linguistic Ghost Limbs & the Melon Heads of Connecticut

Linguistic Ghost Limbs & the Melon Heads of Connecticut

Update: 2025-12-17
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Why do we still dial phones with no dials, roll down windows that don’t roll, and store things in cupboards that hold no cups?


In this episode of The Box of Oddities, Kat and Jethro explore linguistic ghost limbs—words and phrases that outlived the objects they once described. From cupboard, dashboard, and glove box to carbon copy, footage, horsepower, and deadlines, language refuses to let go of the past. These verbal fossils reveal how history lingers in everyday speech through semantic shift, fossilized metaphors, and semantic bleaching.


Then the show heads deep into New England folklore with the chilling legend of the Melon Heads of Connecticut—grotesque figures said to haunt back roads like Velvet Street and the edges of Roosevelt Forest. Are they escaped asylum patients, outcasts turned monsters, or something far darker?


Language is haunted. So are the woods.

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Linguistic Ghost Limbs & the Melon Heads of Connecticut

Linguistic Ghost Limbs & the Melon Heads of Connecticut

Kat & Jethro Gilligan Toth