You know what Iโ€™m enjoying more than I thought I would?

Hearing a president (OK, president-elect) speak in complete, clear sentences.

You remember sentences, those strings of words you used to hear arranged in logical sequence, with a noun, a verb and a . . . whatโ€™s the word Iโ€™m looking for?

Point, thatโ€™s it: a logical sequence of words with a noun, a verb and a point.

Our departing president isnโ€™t long on those.

His sentences themselves often are longโ€”sometimes they go on and on, deeper into the woods with every thought that strikes him. Often, though, a sentence lacks a point. Sometimes they go the other way, with so many points, some visible only to the speaker, that listeners give up, shake their heads and start counting the days.

Too much has been written about George W. Bushโ€™s linguistic struggles. As his fans have maintained, foggy expression doesnโ€™t necessarily indicate foggy thought, though in this case I think it did.

But itโ€™s reassuring, isnโ€™t it, to hear Barack Obama begin a sentence, navigate the treacherous middle and arrive at the end without having deviated from his original purpose? That he also doesnโ€™t put verbs in disagreement with subjects, mispronounce words or invent his own when the generally accepted ones donโ€™t suit him is a welcome bonus.

Call me a nitpicker, but I couldnโ€™t develop much confidence in a leader who said, โ€œIs our children learning?โ€ or โ€œThereโ€™s no question this [earthquake in China] is a major human disaster that requires a strong response from the Chinese government . . . but it also responds a compassionate response from nations to whomโ€”that have got the blessings, good blessings of life, and thatโ€™s us.โ€

Or these, some famous, some obscure:

โ€œThey misunderestimated me.โ€

โ€œAnd so in my State of theโ€”my State of the Unionโ€”or stateโ€”my speech to the nation, whatever you want to call it, speech to the nationโ€”I asked Americans to give 4,000 yearsโ€”4,000 hours over the nextโ€”the rest of your lifeโ€”of service to America. Thatโ€™s what I askedโ€”4,000 hours.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s an old saying in Tennesseeโ€”I know itโ€™s in Texas, probably in Tennesseeโ€”that says, fool me once, shame onโ€”shame on you. Fool meโ€”you canโ€™t get fooled again.โ€

โ€œWill the highways on the internet become more few?โ€

All of us make verbal mistakes; my radio show is a living, expanding monument to that. Those quotes, though, may tell us something about the president: They seem to indicate not just a tongue-trip, but a lack of understanding of the words coming out of his own mouth.

A once-common criticism you donโ€™t hear much now that weโ€™re used to him is still valid: When he gets off the script, heโ€™s lost. Multiply these fumbles by hundreds, apply them even to common words and phrases, and you getโ€”what?

Thatโ€™s a puzzle. If I could travel 50 years into the future, one of the things Iโ€™d like to bring back is a historianโ€™s biography: โ€œWorst President Ever: The Mystifying Ascent of George W. Bush.โ€ Since he first ran for governor in Texas, and an Austin-based friend tipped me to the hard-partying Yalie frat rat who dared to presume he could knock off Ann Richards, Iโ€™ve watched and listened to Bush with wonder, puzzlement, anger, disgust, frustration and near-utter despair at the thought that so many people could be fooled for so long.

Not much longer, though. Soon, when the president speaks, he wonโ€™t sound like a combination of Mrs. Malaprop, the Rev. William Spooner, Foghorn Leghorn and Yoda. Whoopee.

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