RE: Sweet story...
October 11, 2015 at 12:41 am
(This post was last modified: October 11, 2015 at 12:42 am by MTL.)
(October 10, 2015 at 10:43 pm)Pyrrho Wrote:(October 10, 2015 at 6:20 pm)MTL Wrote:
I think your response is due to the fact that I utilized the term "bastardized"
which sounds like it has a negative connotation;
You have indeed hit upon the word that is the source of our apparent disagreement. I believe you are misusing the word "bastardize."
Here is Oxford:
Quote:bastardize
verb
[WITH OBJECT]
1(often as adjective bastardized) Corrupt or debase(a language, art form, etc.), typically by adding new elements:a strange, bastardized form of French
http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/defini...ctCode=all
Their example is rather fitting for our discussion, but unimportant to my point. To "bastardize" something is not merely to change it. The word itself conveys also a judgement about the change. It means that the change is making the thing worse.
So, it sounds like it has a negative connotation because it is saying that the change is negative.
Notice, the word "evolve" is quite different:
Quote:evolve
verb
1Develop gradually:[NO OBJECT]: the company has evolved into a major chemical manufacturerthe Gothic style evolved from the Romanesque[WITH OBJECT]: each school must evolve its own way of working
http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/defini...ctCode=all
Here there is the concept of change, but notice there is no negative judgement about the change. In fact, if anything, there is a suggestion of improvement rather than the idea that the thing is being debased.
So when you say that a language is "bastardized," you are not merely saying that it is changed. You are also suggesting that the change is for the worse, not the better, nor even neutral.
My objection is to the idea that a change in language must be for the worse. But that is what you are saying when you say that the language is bastardized. I think from the context of your post that you mean merely that it changes, rather than that it changes for the worse. In which case, you mean something other than that the language is bastardized.
Applying this to my previous post, when I stated that it is a silly claim that Americans have bastardized English, I mean that it is silly to suppose that current British English is the source and current American English is a bastardization (i.e., a change for the worse) of that "pure" form. It is factually wrong in the sense that both have gradually changed from a common source (a common ancestor, to keep with the evolutionary metaphor), and modern British English has changed from that common source in some ways that modern American English has not. So if a change from the original is a "bastardization" (which I object to for the reasons above), then modern British English has been bastardized, in some respects, more than modern American English has been bastardized. But, of course, the nonjudgmental fact is, both are derived from a common source, and their paths diverged. But, we again are at the conclusion that it is just false to claim that British English is inherently correct and American English is wrong insofar as it differs from modern British English. Both are different from what they were when America was first settled by British people.
Then I stand by my use of the term bastardized, Pyrrho.
To my mind, both Old French and Old English were more disciplined than the French and English of today.
Especially given technology...texting is, as I previously observed, reducing entire sentences down to a few letters.
I previously mentioned that I observed that the loss of literacy and vocabulary
is lamentable, even if I celebrate the evolution of various dialects at the same time.
I find it amusing and useful when new terms find their way into our language,
for instance, "bling" is a comparatively new, slang term
but is no less expressive for being slang.
When someone says "kick him to the curb" they certainly succeed in conveying a clear mental image,
even though it isn't exactly Shakespeare.
So I would posit that it is possible for a language to evolve, and degrade, at the same time.
The bastardization of a language can still be part of its evolution;
language is subject to entropy, just like all things.
Humanity, after all, will probably evolve themselves right into extinction.
However, I meant what I conveyed earlier:
while I lament the general decline of literacy and the inevitable collateral losses that occur in language as it evolves,
I still celebrate different dialects and consider them legitimate, living language;
regardless of whether it happens in America, Canada, the UK, or in cyberspace.