Below are some observations about the nature of our language and how it is changing. Here is a sentence containing various examples of language evolution.

“If you google “laser” and the interface that definitely with the tangebalized results we already have, we can destroy the vegetables :)”

The sentence above contains several ways our language is changing: a new spelling (u), a noun turned into a verb (google), a compound (interface), an abbreviation (def), an adjective that has become a verb ( tangibalized), an abbreviation that has become a word (nuke), slang (veggies) and a new punctuation mark — :).

But of course, our language has been changing since the first growl. Try this:

“She was a dignified woman all her life, home in chirche-dore she was five years old, with no other company in you, but that’s why she doesn’t need to speak like anyone else.”

Chaucer wrote this verse, but it is about how Christopher Columbus spoke and wrote a few years after Chaucer’s death in 1400.

How about “Do you have milk?” Or “I fired her.” Neither Chaucer nor Columbus would have understood it. The first is a grammatical error and the second is a mispronunciation of “asked”, which is now creeping into the written language as “axed”. Whether or not these current use cases become permanent has yet to be decided, but then who thought “9/11” would mean anything more than 9/11, and a toilet plunger would ever be called a “cup of force?” of hydraulic explosion” (US Army).

Here are some ways the language is changing, and some of them will become permanent, if they haven’t already.

1. The use of pompous or ambiguous jargon.

AT&T used the high “customer in/out ease of access” to describe
their complaint windows. The White House called the invasion of Grenada a “vertical insertion before dawn.” We like to tease the Pentagon because they are so creative. When they say “neutralize the adversary conveniently” they mean shoot first, mate. The Pentagon refers to combat as “violence processing,” and “permanent pre-hostilities” means peace, bro. “Collateral damage” means killing our allies by accident.

But let us not forget trade and industry. Shell Oil called its gas station employees “hydrocarbon transfer specialists,” and there are no janitors anymore because they are all called Maintenance Engineers (and there isn’t an engineering degree among all). Most companies don’t have mail rooms, they have Document Distribution Centers. The salesmen and women are so correct “associates”, which avoids gender identification, but it seems like they own part of the business. Maybe that’s the point.

2. The Compression of Words in Acronyms and Abbreviations.

Does anyone remember what scuba means? We didn’t bother to capitalize it, but
stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus. How about “laser”? It stands for Light Amplification through Stimulated Emission of Radiation. ZIP stands for Zoned Improvement Program and POSH stands for “Port Out, Starboard Aft” which are the best staterooms on a ship.

If we start putting compressions together, we find phrases like this one from Amoco Oil. “To access GPNU2, @ADD the source file TEXDIS*TEMPLATES.GPNU2 while in PARSD.” Excuse me moi? And from Northrop Aviation we found this procedure: “The program was loaded into the CMS and compiled with Fortran Compliers rs (FORTUS), GICFTG and H Extended (FHX).

3. The Slang Epidemic

Slang is so prevalent that people don’t even realize they’re using it. “Reappearance” is
not a word, nor is he his more famous cousin “regardless”. I have heard people at high-class business meetings say “guest” with a straight face and “ever green” to mean continually updated or improved.

In everyday language, we hear other slang words like “bummer,” “framistant,” “diddlysquat,” cockamayme,” “disambiguate,” and of course, “veggies,” which is what “vegans” eat.” which means “what’s up?” LOL has now come to verbal language.

4. Compose words into new words

Composition begins when two words are used together so often that

they become a script. After a few years of hyphenation, the hyphen is dropped and a new word hits the streets. “Downtime” became “downtime” and is now “downtime.” There are endless combinations: “greenmail”, “meltdown”, “airhead”, “proactive”, and “ripoff”, to name a few.

We like to put “mega” in front of almost any word: “megabucks,” “megatrend,” “megastar,” “megabyte,” and “megamillionaire.” We also put “ultra” in front of the words: “ultralite”, “ultrafine” or “ultraswede”, and we paste “anti” anywhere: “anti-terrorism”, “anti-discrimination”, “anti-war”, “anti-marriage”, etc.

Lastly, we like to stick out “out” at the end of many self-respecting words: “far away”, make out”, “vegetarian”, “pig”, “freak out”, “burnt”, “police out”. “, “zoned out”, “disgusted” and “chill out” to name a few. Some of these will be separated by hyphens, then a word eventually.

5. New definitions for old words and new foreign words

It all depends on how you say it. “bad” if you mean bad, and “baaad” if you mean
good. “Anchor” used to stop ships, “wired” meant wiring in a house or elsewhere, “heavy” used to mean heavy, and “trash” meant something thrown on the sidewalk. “Meat market” did not mean a place to meet beautiful girls, “stoned” was a medieval form of execution that is still practiced today in some third world countries, and “crunch” was what Rice Krispies did. “Cold” means a temperature.

We are ingesting foreign words at a record rate. Anything on a Mexican restaurant menu is a new American word, “glitch” is a German word, and “skoosh” is a Japanese word. Globalization, for the next 1,000 years, will make us all speak the same language.

6. The conversion of nouns and adjectives into verbs

“Tomorrow we will be drawing” (Bectel).

“Relates well with customers” (IBM).

“During phase 2 we will refocus the (Boeing Aircraft) program.

“The power line was built in isolation to please the landowners” (US Forest Service).

All these sentences were extracted from actual documents used in writing.

training workshops, as well as “We Professionalize in Trailers Without Damage” on the side of a truck, “This report will define a response” by Martín Marrieta, and “Routinization began” by Aceite ARCO. “Reinforced” means heavy-duty reinforcement at the BLM, and from Cameron Iron Works: “That whole program must be absolute.” Bright.

7. Regionalism

If you “live under the bridge”, you live south of the Mackinaw River

Bridge, and if you want a big sandwich, you have to know what to order: a wimpie in the Northeast, a hoagie in Philadelphia, a submarine in New York, a po boy in Louisiana, a “hero” in the Southwest and a “blimp” in San Francisco. If you’re “shopping” in Louisiana, you’ve been to the store, and depending on where you are, you’ll either get killed for calling someone a “jerk” or congratulated for recognizing a really nice guy. Getting a soft drink can be a challenge, depending on where you are. In some parts of the county, “coke” means anything cold, after which you have to specify which cold drink you want, and then there’s “fiz,” “soda,” “pop,” and “soda pop.”

8. The invention of idioms

“I was amazed that you were chewing the fat and shooting the bull with that
hacker But believe me, because if you want to stand off the wall and spend an arm and a leg polishing yourself, let me water the horse and I’ll join you.”

That sentence is made up entirely of idioms. In business, people “massage the numbers” and catch up. In the trucking industry, if someone says their coffee has been “sauced and puffed,” that means it’s ready to drink. In the government they talk about “increased income”, which means that they are going to raise our taxes.

In 1942, Eric Partridge in his book “Usage and Abuse” said: “The field of language is strewn with the dry bones of adventurous words that once began with a paternal blessing to make their fortune, but have met an untimely end and serve only , when they come together, to fill the shelves of a lexicographical museum”.

Changes in verbal language occur with impressive speed. Some of that language, if it hangs around long enough and is used often enough, will eventually find its way into written language. Some make it to dictionaries. However, just because a word appears in a dictionary does not mean it will stay there. Old words fly off the pages and unused words fly after them. Dictionaries evolve, just like language evolves. The wary keep a 1932 copy of the Encyclopedia Britannica on their shelves because it has scholarly articles instead of definitions like modern encyclopedias, which are enlarged dictionaries with lots of color pictures, and throw away last year’s dictionary with the year’s phone book. past.

Business, industry, and government writers, at the managerial level and above, should be careful about using words that may detract from their professional competence. Misuse of the word can lead to ridicule among associates and distract from good education and great talent.

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