Acronyms, Idioms And Slang: The Evolution Of The English Language.
Essay, Research Paper
Acronyms, Idioms and Slang: the Evolution of the English
Language.
Although the English language is only 1500 years old, it has
evolved at
an incredible rate: so much so, that, at first glance, the average
person in
America today would find most Shakespearean literature confusing
without the aid
of an Old-English dictionary or Cliff’s Notes. Yet Shakespear lived
just 300
years ago! Some are seeing this is a sign of the decline of the
English
language, that people are becoming less and less literate. As R.
Walker writes
in his essay “Why English Needs Protecting,” “the moral and
economic decline of
Great Britain in the post-war era has been mirrored by a decline in
the English
language and literature.” I, however, disagree. It seems to me that
the point of
language is to communicate? to express some idea or exchange some
form of
information with someone else. In this sense, the English language
seems, not
necessarily to be improving or decaying, but optimizing? becoming
more
efficient.
It has been both said and observed that the technological evolution
of a
society tends to grow exponentially rather than linearly. The same
can also be
said of the English language. English is evolving on two levels:
culturally and
technologically. And both of these are unavoidable. Perhaps the
more noticeable
of the two today is the technological evolution of English. When
the current
scope of a given language is insufficient to describe a new
concept, invention,
or property, then there becomes a necessity to alter, combine, or
create words
to provide a needed definition. For example, the field of
Astro-Physics has
provided the English language with such new terms as pulsar,
quasar, quark,
black hole, photon, neutrino, positron etc. Similarly, our society
has recently
be inundated with a myriad of new terms from the field of Computer
Science:
motherboard, hard drive, Internet, megabyte, CD, IDE, SCSI, TCP/IP,
WWW, HTTP,
DMA, GUI and literally hundreds of others acronyms this particular
field is
notorious for. While some of these terms, such as black hole and
hard drive,
are just a combination of pre-existing words, many of them are new
words
altogether. To me it seems clear that anything that serves to
increase the
academic vocabulary of a society should be welcomed, although not
all would
agree. For example, many have accused this trend of creating an
acronym for
everything to be impersonal and confusing. And, while I agree that
there is
really no need to abbreviate Kentucky Fried Chicken, it does become
tiring to
have to constantly say Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) or
Transfer Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) when they are both used so
frequently when
dealing with computers on a network. Not only is it futile for one
to reject
these inevitably new additions to our language, one would do
oneself well to
actually learn them.
The cultural evolution of English is not as distinguishable,
nor
seemingly as necessary, as the technological evolution of English,
yet it exists
nonetheless. It is on this level that the English language has
primarily been
accused of being in a state of decline, specifically by the
incorporation of
“slang” into mainstream language. But Webster’s Dictionary defines
slang as:
1: language peculiar to a particular group: as a: ARGOT b:
JARGON 2: an informal nonstandard vocabulary composed
typically of coinages, arbitrarily changed words, and
extravagant, forced, or facetious figures of speech.
In this sense, much of what is commonly thought to be proper
English can be said
to be slang. When the U.S. declared its independence from England,
one of the
things scholars did was change the spelling of certain English
words: colour was
changed to color, theatre to theater, etc. In addition, Americans
have, over
time, given new names for certain things: what we call a trunk (of
a car), the
English call a boot; what we call an apartment, the English call a
flat, etc.
But because they have been in use for so long, they are no longer
considered to
be slang words. R. Walker writes, “if slang and jargon are fixed in
the
language, a process begun by their addition to the dictionary, it
helps to make
them official.” It seems then, that a word is slang only if it has
not yet been
accepted, that it is instead a candidate whose initiation into the
English
language is determined by popular opinion and time.
Slang in America today, while varying from region to region, has
one
major theme in common? it is short. And while history has shown
that most of
it will die? never making official “word” status? to be replaced by
new slang
words, some of it will stay. The word dis (short for disrespect),
for example,
has become a popular word used by more than just Generation X.
What’s
interesting, however, is that even the nature of current everyday
prose has
begun to shorten: it is more direct and to the point. As an example
of older-
-style writing, Stephen Jay Gould, in his essay “Counters and Cable
Cars,”
writes:
Consequently, in San Francisco this morning, I awoke before
sunrise in order to get my breakfast of Sears’s famous eighteen
pancakes (marvel not, they’re very small) before the morning
crush of more amenable hours rendered the restaurant
uninhabitable
on Berra’s maxim.
This piece, while cleverly phrased, has a wordiness to it that
would rarely be
found in the average present-day essay. This is not because writers
of today
have smaller vocabularies than essayist of yesteryear (although
they might),
but rather because there is a much simpler way of saying exactly
what Gould
said. Ever since my very first English class, I have been told
that, as a
writer, it is my job to get the reader’s attention, for I have
something I wish
them to read. Furthermore, as a writer, it is also my job to
communicate
clearly to my audience. In this respect, why choose one word that
is fairly
uncommon (amenable) when other less ambiguous words could be used.
This is not
to say that writers should cater to the lowest common denominator?
the
everyday reader should still be held responsible for developing a
reasonable
vocabulary. Nevertheless, when a writer uses more words than are
necessary to
convey accurately his/her message, he/she has is doing their
message an
injustice. Thus, in the writing of today there can generally be
seen a more
direct, seemingly less ambiguous tone and direction (save for the
uneducated).
The days when it was looked upon favorably to write in great length
and use as
many “big” words as were possible is over. That style, albeit
elegant, does not
suffice in this fast-paced society. Acronyms, idioms, and slang are
constantly
in the making, providing new, quicker ways for people to convey
ideas and
exchange information. English, in the coming century, will
inevitably come to
focus more on the actual message than the package it is delivered
in. It
follows then, that what be developed in the children of the future,
more than
anything else, is their ability to think; to formulate a thought
worthy of
sharing. For, no matter what shape the English language takes in
coming years,
what will never change is the desire and need our of society to
communicate.
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Для автора это очень важно, это стимулирует его на новое творчество!