towndrunk
New in Town
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- Austin, Texas
Undertow said:However, I believe the argument discussed in the article, and my previous point posted, is that people are either losing vocabulary overall, or not. Or in other words, are people becoming less articulate?
So one might argue we are shifting in language, thereby changing vocabulary, but are you trying to state that with the shift of vocabularly we are, in fact, simplifying our language to the point of fewer words overall?
sorry about the digression, i was pointing my post to your last post along these lines:
"Our society, as a whole – rich and poor – simply no longer values proper grammar in routine daily use."
I am not saying we are moving toward less words at all. in fact, i think we are merely using different words altogether. as much as i dislike using a specific example, i will, in hope that it serves the general idea. take the word "bling". i would be surprised if this word were in any literary text to date, yet it is an interesting word because it's origin has been meticulously recorded and after a number of years in common use it is now officially in the SOED! it a real word now. how many people reading this post, i wonder, use this word. arguably, there may even be some who don't even know what it means. a writer decides to use this word and it, by happenstance and over time, replaces the word ostentatious. a few generations later take a vocabulary test with ostentatious on it. has their vocabulary shrunk?
are they any less articulate if the new word takes on the meaning of the former?
I believe that as new language is formed, those not fluent in the new vocabulary perceive deficiency where there is none. this perception of losing vocabulary words will persist as long as languages continue to produce new words, new meaning for old words, and speakers of the language embracing/rejecting these changes in varying degrees by age, geography, culture, and economy.