Subject: Discussion Seed: 'evolution' of language?
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Posted on: 2011-03-02 17:08:00 UTC

Here at the PPC, we like the English language. We like the English language a lot. In fact, some of us like other languages a lot, too.

However, recently, I got a very interesting point made to me by a cousin of mine who uses a lot of chat speak in her notes to me. You probably have heard of this remark before-- that languages are constantly changing and there is no way to say that already-established spelling and grammar are 'right.' She called it 'evolution of english.'

This got me thinking. Evolution.

I do not think it means what she thinks it means.

Organisms never really stop evolving. Organisms with traits that render them more effective in their environments end up suriving longer and reproducing more than ones that are less effective.

Key words being effective in their environment. An organism may be this by having an orca pattern under the sea, or being bigger, or faster, or being able to eat something nothing else can eat. But what makes a language effective in its environment?

Well, the people who use the language and the context they use it in is the language's environment. The effectiveness of a language has to do with how well it conveys intended meaning.

Why, just the other day I 'butchered English' while texting my mother.

"Bought small carrotbag."

But... the meaning was retained. I bought a small bag of carrots. If I had written "Bought smallcarrot bag" it probably would mean, I bought a bag of small carrots.

The CONTEXT here was a text message between mom and kid. It conveyed all meaning needed. Thus, this was an effective use of language and if enough people use this syntax it might become 'correct' syntax.

So yeah, my cousin is right in a way. But language doesn't evolve because 'we just like to text this way: it's easy,' it evolves because the parties involved don't see any change in meaning or loss of information. Even when there is. Which can sometimes be Bad.

Half of the PPC's funny in-mission shenanigans come from miscommunication in a fanfiction. I think (aside from wanting to preserve the grammar and spellings because they're what everybody already understands and should not be messed with without reason) what we as the PPC get angry at is people changing language in a way that is NOT effective in its environment.

Agree? Disagree? Thoughts? Discussion?

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