Subject: Ooh, a linguistics discussion! *jumps on*
Author:
Posted on: 2011-03-03 18:47:00 UTC

I'm going to be even more difficult here and start drawing lines between evolution of words and evolution of structure.

As far as changes in the structure of language- grammar and syntax, or constructions like you mentioned with your text message as an example- yeah, I think you're right. We learn the structure of our language in a certain way, and changing it really does affect the meaning of what we read and/or hear. Sometimes the change can be effective- for example, in a text message it isn't really efficient to type out a full sentence with capitalization and articles and things- but I agree with you that it does depend on the context. "Bought small carrotbag" is appropriate and effective in a text message; it wouldn't be in a written report to your boss.

(Unrelated: "carrotbag" is my new favorite word ever.)

Which brings me to my other point- change and evolution of individual words, in my personal opinion, is awesome. I'm going to hold up Shakespeare as an example here, because Shakespeare is my go-to example for everything. Shakespeare invented squillions of new words and phrases, stuck words together, back-constructed words, stuck on prefixes and suffixes and what-have-you, and he could do that because he was writing at a time when English was a) in a state of rapid change and expansion, due to a new medium (i.e. secular theatre, also the printing press), and b) not yet standardized by things like dictionaries.

I would argue that we're in a similar situation now. The advent of the internet and text-messaging and other such new technology has created a space for language to grow and change. The new language constructions that come out of it aren't standardized yet- yes, there are things like UrbanDictionary and so forth, but they're mostly descriptive rather than prescriptive, and I don't consider them particularly authoritative. I think, until our frame of thought catches up with our technology, the language of the internet changes too fast to standardize, so we're looking at considerable linguistic shift for some time yet. And in a lot of cases, I don't think it's a bad thing at all.

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