Subject: I agree with your cousin
Author:
Posted on: 2011-03-03 09:12:00 UTC

That fact that language changes is a form of evolution. Evolution means slow change/gradual development. It doesn't just apply to biological systems.

I can probably better tell you about my own experience with my own native tongue. In Dutch there are a few very common grammatical spelling errors (in translation: saying 'them' rather than 'they'; saying 'bigger as' rather than 'bigger than'; saying 'hele' (adjective) instead of 'heel' (adverb) (can't translate this, but suffice to say that in one particular case people use an adjective where they should use an adverb) ; adding spacing between the different parts of a compound noun (this is called English disease); and not adding spaces after 'te' or 'ten' when they are needed, thus using a different word than meant.)

I once took part in a survey by a research institution about such errors. The questions were: do you come across this error? Do you find it acceptable Dutch? If not, do you think it will become acceptable Dutch? When?

In all these cases the reader or listener probably still knows what the other person is meaning to say. Only language purist grind their teeth.

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.

Actually, this is exactly why language evolves. It starts with something else being easier to say and because no meaning is lost, the difference becomes acceptable and perhaps at some time the new standard. If there was no reason to say things differently, language would not change/evolve.

Reply Return to messages