Friday 20 June 2014

What makes a word "real"?

English is a language spoken all over the world. It is spoken even by millions of people whose mother language is anotherone. That's maybe one reason why English is a language with such a fast and big evolution. Yes, it's true. English is changing everyday and it has changed all history long. There are everyday new words, expressions and pronunciations and it happens withou us noticing about it. Some of this new vocabulary is produced by joining different words. Some other words are originated when you use prefixes understood in other contexts in a new but logical way.
 These sort of words are called SLANG. Some people believe they're quite harmful for the language.
However, Slang language is becoming very useful nowadays. Everybody uses these kind of words like hangry, adorkable, YOLO, LOL...
Slang language helps us create new concepts and ideas, but there's a lot of slang vocabular in English language. How can we know if a slang word is real and usable? Maybe, you'll be told something like:"If the word isn't in the dicionary, it doesnt exist" How can dicionary editors know every single word in English if it's changing everyday? The question is what makes a word real?
Well, probably the truthis that a word becomes real as soon as aome people can use it and understand it. Personally, I think English is a very rich language and very functional because thanks to this phenomenon we call slang and some other tools which help us originate new words, we can communicate new ideas and concepts which other languages cannot. That's why, thanks to these language mechanisms we can originate neologisms wich doesn't sound in uch a technical way and can be understood by everyone.
This is my message: I encourage you to use the language in the most fascinating way you can without worrying about the rules. English is a language you can play with, not a scienc wich establishes some new rules. We’re human. We love to play with words in creative ways. And in the process, we change the language.

Here, you can hear a speech given by Anne Curzan speaking about this phenomenon.



As a curious phenomenon, some other words were originated a long time ago but they had a very different meaning. Have a look at some examples:
  1. Nice: This word used to mean “silly, foolish, simple.” Far from the compliment it is today!
  2. Silly: Meanwhile, silly went in the opposite direction: in its earliest uses, it referred to things worthy or blessed; from there it came to refer to the weak and vulnerable, and more recently to those who are foolish.
  3. Awful: Awful things used to be “worthy of awe” for a variety of reasons, which is how we get expressions like “the awful majesty of God.”
  4. Fizzle: The verb fizzle once referred to the act of producing quiet flatulence (think “SBD”); American college slang flipped the word’s meaning to refer to failing at things.
  5. Wench: A shortened form of the Old English word wenchel (which referred to children of either sex), the word wench used to mean “female child” before it came to be used to refer to female servants — and more pejoratively to wanton women.
  6. Fathom: It can be hard to fathom how this verb moved from meaning “to encircle with one’s arms” to meaning “to understand after much thought.” Here’s the scoop: One’s outstretched arms can be used as a measurement (a fathom), and once you have fathoms, you can use a fathom line to measure the depth of water. Think metaphorically and fathoming becomes about getting to the bottom of things.
  7. Clue: Centuries ago, a clue (or clew) was a ball of yarn. Think about threading your way through a maze and you’ll see how we got from yarn to key bits of evidence that help us solve things.
  8. Myriad: If you had a myriad of things 600 years ago, it meant that you specifically had 10,000 of them – not just a lot.
  9. Naughty: Long ago, if you were naughty, you had naught or nothing. Then it came to mean evil or immoral, and now you are just badly behaved.
  10. Eerie: Before the word eerie described things that inspire fear, it used to describe people feeling fear — as in one could feel faint and eerie.
  11. Spinster: As it sounds, spinsters used to be women who spun. It referred to a legal occupation before it came to mean “unmarried woman” – and often not in the most positive ways, as opposed to a bachelor …
  12. Bachelor: A bachelor was a young knight before the word came to refer to someone who had achieved the lowest rank at a university — and it lives on in that meaning in today’s B.A. and B.S degrees. It’s been used for unmarried men since Chaucer’s day.
  13. Flirt: Some 500 years ago, flirting was flicking something away or flicking open a fan or otherwise making a brisk or jerky motion. Now it involves playing with people’s emotions (sometimes it may feel like your heart is getting jerked around in the process).
  14. Guy: This word is an eponym. It comes from the name of Guy Fawkes, who was part of a failed attempt to blow up Parliament in 1605. Folks used to burn his effigy, a “Guy Fawkes” or a “guy,” and from there it came to refer to a frightful figure. In the U.S., it has come to refer to men in general.
  15. Hussy: Believe it or not, hussy comes from the word housewife (with several sound changes, clearly) and used to refer to the mistress of a household, not the disreputable woman it refers to today.
  16. Egregious: It used to be possible for it to be a good thing to be egregious: it meant you were distinguished or eminent. But in the end, the negative meaning of the word won out, and now it means that someone or something is conspicuously bad — not conspicuously good.
  17. Quell: Quelling something or someone used to mean killing it, not just subduing it.
  18. Divest: 300 years ago, divesting could involve undressing as well as depriving others of their rights or possessions. It has only recently come to refer to selling off investments.
  19. Senile: Senile used to refer simply to anything related to old age, so you could have senile maturity. Now it refers specifically to those suffering from senile dementia.
  20. Meat: Have you ever wondered about the expression “meat and drink”? It comes from an older meaning of the word meat that refers to food in general — solid food of a variety of kinds (not just animal flesh), as opposed to drink.

That's for some people something troublesome. How on earth are we all going to communicate effectively if we allow words to shift in meaning like that? The good news: History tells us that we’ll be fine. Words have been changing meaning — sometimes radically — as long as there have been words and speakers to speak them.

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