Origin Unknown: Profile of Anatoly Liberman

2 February 2016

Lapham’s Quarterly has a nice profile of etymologist Anatoly Liberman.

I don’t have much to say about the piece, except to highlight a couple of quotes. On why he pursues etymologies:

“Love is the wrong word,” he says. “Etymology is not a child or a woman. So there is nothing to love it for. It’s the excitement of discovery. Whether you discover a new particle in physics or the origin of a word, it’s really the same thing. It’s the excitement of the chase, the hunter’s feeling that you had your prey, and that you succeeded!”

And on the utility of Google:

“Can you do any searching with computers?” Liberman repeats the question in a resigned tone. “That’s what everybody asks. And, unfortunately, this answer is no. If you want to know the origin of a word, you will open the computer and Google the world heifer. Google will give you the titles of twenty etymological dictionaries, which is a waste to me. I have them all on my shelf. I know much more than a Google search, because I have every edition of every dictionary. I don’t need that. Sometimes Google Books will highlight a page, including Notes and Queries, that will show me something I may not know. But this is not even for dessert. These are crumbs.”

ADS Word of the Year for 2015

9 January 2016

Meeting in Austin, Texas this week, the American Dialect Society gave the nod to the singular they as its Word of the Year for 2015. The group, which has its members those who study how English is used in North America, also dubbed the singular they as the Most Useful word for the past year.

The singular they is the use of that pronoun, which is usually plural, to represent a single person when that person’s gender is unknown or ambiguous, as in, “Not having met him or her, John didn’t know whether they would make a good copy editor.” As seen in this example, the singular they is a substitute for the clunky he or she construction. This use of they, traditionally viewed as incorrect by strict grammarians, can be found as far back as the works of Chaucer in the fourteenth century, but has increasingly become more acceptable since the 1980s, with many style guides now accepting it. That new-found acceptance, plus news stories about Caitlyn Jenner and the success of television shows like Orange is the New Black and Transparent, which feature transgender characters, brought this use of they to the fore in the past year.

Other solutions to the problem of representing ambiguous or unknown gender, such as proposed pronouns zhe and thon, have failed to come into general use. Pronouns are a closed class in the English lexicon, that is they don’t readily admit new members. Nouns and verbs, on the other hand, are an open class, readily adopting new words into those parts of speech. They, in fact, is the most recent pronoun to be added to standard English (not counting ones like zhe or thon that haven’t gained traction). They is a borrowing from Old Norse, appearing in English by 1200. She is another pronoun that was adopted at about the same time, being attested to sometime prior to 1160. (She was voted the ADS World of the Millennium in 2001.) All the other standard English pronouns date back to Old English.

The ADS choice of WOTY is primarily undertaken for fun and public relations purposes. While the choices are informed by the scholarly work of its members, it’s not a rigorous academic exercise. The proceedings are often raucous and entertaining.

Singular they received 187 votes for WOTY. Other nominees were:

  • thanks, Obama. A sarcastic blaming of the president for a problem, (76 votes).

  • ammosexual. A gun lover, (42).

  • ghost (verb). To abruptly end a conversation, especially online, by cutting communication.

  • on fleek. Impeccable, well-arrayed (4).

Nominees in the Most Useful category were:

  • they (singular). (214).

  • microaggression. A subtle form of racism or bias, (62).

  • zero fucks givenZFG. An indication of supreme indifference, (41).

  • shade. A subtle or clever insult or criticism, (11).

  • mic drop. A definitive end to a discussion after making an impressive point, (2).

Nominees in the Most Creative category were:

  • ammosexual. (153).

  • adult (verb). To behave like a grownup, (71)

  • yassyaassyaaass, etc. An expression of excitement or strong approval, (43).

  • lowkey (adverb). to a small extent, subtly, opposite of highkey, (38).

  • squad. One’s posse or close circle of friends, (3).

Nominees in the Most Unnecessary category:

  • manbun. A man’s hairstyle pulled into a bun, (207).

  • or nah. A tag following a statement indicating it may not occur, (34).

  • thanks, Obama. (34).

  • dadbod. The flabby physique of a typical middle-aged man, (16).

  • trigger warning. An alert for potentially distressing material, (10).

Nominees in the Most Outrageous category, the slash indicates a run-off vote:

  • fuckboyfuckboi. A man who behaves objectionably or promiscuously, (127/173)

  • schlong (verb). To defeat soundly, (93/148).

  • white student union. A campus organization formed in response to a black student union (27).

  • sharewashing. A marketing campaign that treats services as “sharing,” (14).

  • fish gape. Posed expression with cheeks sucked in and lips slightly apart, (3).

Nominees in the Most Euphemistic category:

  • Netflix and chill. Sexual come-on, update to the come up and see my etchings of decades past, (315).

  • afasf. Abbreviation for as fuck used as an intensifier after an adjective, (1).

  • Swipe right/left (verb). To accept or reject, based on gestures used on the Tinder dating app (24).

  • lit. Amazing, excellent, fun, (2).

Nominees in the Most Likely to Succeed category:

  • ghost (verb). (223).

  • CRISPR. Name of a gene-editing technology, (51).

  • on fleek. (23).

  • mom. Admiring term of address for a mother-figure, (17).

Nominees in the Least Likely to Succeed category:

  • sitbit. Device that rewards a sedentary lifestyle, a play on the Fitbit fitness tracker, (102/191).

  • hoverboard. Self-balancing, motorized skateboard, (82/106).

  • Berniementum. Momentum behind the candidacy of Bernie Sanders, (59).

  • Uber for X. Pitch used by startups to compare themselves with Uber, (33).

Nominees for Most Notable Hashtag (new category):

  • #SayHerName. Call to bring attention to violence against women of color, (178).

  • #LoveWins. Celebration of the US Supreme Court ruling on marriage equality, (60).

  • #StayWoke. Call to remain vigilant and informed, used by the #BlackLivesMatter movement, (59).

  • #StayMadAbby. Ridiculing the plaintiff in an affirmative action case, (17).

  • #JeSuisParis. Expression of solidarity after the Paris terror attacks, (6).

Nominees for Most Notable Emoji (new category):

  • eggplant, used as sexual innuendo, (138).

  • 100, keep it 100, keep it real, (56).

  • heart eyes, romantic, passionate, (31).

  • information desk person, sassy, sarcastic, (31).

  • winking face, humorous, flirtatious, (8).

English Composition 101

17 December 2015

This isn’t strictly on the topic of word and phrase origins, but it’s a topic I have recently gained considerable experience in. John Warner has penned an article for Inside Higher Ed titled “I Cannot Prepare Students to Write Their (History, Philosophy, Sociology, Poly Sci., etc...) Papers,” and I couldn’t agree with his conclusions more.

The one thing I would add to Warner’s article is that I take considerable time walking the students back from attempts to writing in an academic register. They become so focused on achieving the right tone and vocabulary that logic and clarity are crushed. They try to achieve the register they read in scholarly articles, but their mastery of basic argumentation and clarity is so shaky that they end up producing gibberish. When they abandon their attempts to write in a particular register, suddenly their ideas shine through. (And I am constantly pleasantly surprised by the inventiveness and quality of their ideas.) Which makes me muse that perhaps what is needed is a two-semester sequence in writing. The first semester, taken early in the undergraduate career, would be basic writing and argumentation. The second, taken midway through the undergraduate years, would be writing a research paper. Teach the fundamentals of clarity and argumentation first, and then after they’ve achieved a degree of mastery over that, teach them how to integrate source material into their own work. This second course would be discipline-specific. Yes, it’s more time spent on a non-substantive course, but writing is so very important, and most undergrads won’t end up working in the discipline they study anyway. What’s most important is they come away from university with the skills to think and express themselves clearly.

And there is one thing I would change about writing instruction and advice books—I would stop focusing on how to write a good sentence. My experience is that university students know how to write good, grammatical sentences. The one exception are foreign students who have a tenuous grasp of English. Native speakers and those for whom English is a second language but have come up through the US or Canadian secondary school system can write a decent sentence. (Maybe they have a bit of a problem with proper punctuation, especially comma usage, but that’s minor and easily fixed.) Again, when they commit aggravated assault on sentence structure, it is almost always because they’re attempting to write in an unfamiliar register. (I suspect that those who teach at community colleges or open enrollment schools might have a different experience, and those students may genuinely not understand how to write a good sentence. If that’s true, an approach appropriate to that audience is required.)

Why I dislike Bryan Garner

21 November 2015

I don’t dislike the man. I’ve never met him. I’m sure he’s a very nice guy, and given a chance, we’d probably get along just fine. But I don’t like Garner’s Modern American Usage, an Orwellian usage guide published by Oxford University Press.

Why don’t I like it? It’s not simply because it’s “prescriptivist.” I have no problem with giving advice on how to write well. As a teacher of composition, I tell my students how to write all the time, and hopefully I’m teaching them to write well. And it’s not because consistently following Garner’s advice will result in stodgy, unimaginative prose. There is a place for stodgy, unimaginative prose. For example, I tell my students that Garner’s is a good guide if you’re composing a cover letter for a résumé, where you want language that no one could possibly object to. What I object to is Garner’s attitude toward language and the methodology—if you can dignify his arbitrary and subjective process with that label—he uses to formulate his pronouncements.

Garner’s attitude about language is summed up by the Language Change Index that he includes with the entries to the latest editions of his guide. In the index, Garner assigns a rating, or “stage,” from one to five for each change or “mutation” to the language. With his change index, he takes on the role of an oncologist, battling the cancers that are metastasizing throughout the body of the English language.

Garner defines Stage 1 as, “a new form emerges as an innovation (or a dialectal form persists) among a small minority of the language community, perhaps displacing a traditional usage.” He also analogizes Stage 1 as “F,” “quadruple bogey,” “foul,” “bungler,” “dishonorable discharge,” “audible farting,” “$500 fine and jail time,” “expulsion,” and “mortal sin.” So Garner is intent on punishing innovation and inventiveness, as well as those in minority communities who habitually use English in a slightly different way than the majority. Chaucer and Shakespeare, two great linguistic innovators, would not have been treated well by Garner had he lived in their eras.

In Stage 2 “the form spreads to a significant fraction of the language community but remains unacceptable in standard usage.” And in Stage 3 “the form becomes commonplace even among well-educated people but is still avoided in careful usage.” Note the subtle shift here. As the change spreads, Garner alters the criteria by which he rates the change; in other words, he moves the goalposts. No longer is popularity the measure; the metric of “standard usage” becomes “careful usage,” and even the “well-educated” are no longer competent to judge what is acceptable. Those who are allowed to judge a usage dwindle in number as the usage becomes more and more commonplace. And at the end of the line, only he himself is competent to judge. In Garner’s world, democracy is great if he agrees with the wisdom of the crowd, but anathema if he doesn’t. Garner analogizes Stage 3 as “C,” “double bogey,” “smelly,” “rank amateur,” “discharge for the good of the service,” “overload talking,” “$100 fine,” and “venial sin.”

Garner’s descriptions of Stages 4 and 5 are virtually indistinguishable except for one factor. In Stage 4 a change to the language “becomes virtually universal but is opposed on cogent ground by a few linguistic stalwarts (die-hard snoots),” where in Stage 5 it is “universally accepted (not counting pseudo-snoot eccentrics.)” In these stages Garner abandons all pretense of democracy and wisdom of the masses, not even acknowledging that the “well-educated” may have something constructive to contribute. Instead, he becomes the sole arbiter of what is correct, for the difference between “die-hard snoot” and “pseudo-snoot eccentric” is, of course, whether Garner himself approves. His analogies for Stage 5 are confused, shifting back and forth between unobjectionable and favorable, with descriptions like “A,” “par” (not under par; evidently Garner believes that mediocrity should be rewarded with top marks; in my classroom “par” is awarded a grade of “B,” not “A”), “neutral,” “professional,” “honorable discharge,” “refined,” and “virtue.”

Garner has his devotees, but I’m not sure that they have truly considered what his approach to language represents. Among his fans was the writer David Foster Wallace who penned a glowing tribute to the first edition of Garner’s guide, titled “Authority and American Usage.” And it was Wallace who coined the term snoot as a label for prescriptive pedants, a term that Garner himself readily adopted. But Wallace’s paean is a horror of double-speak in which democratic values can only be upheld by Garner’s unilateral dogmatism. (I wonder if Wallace wasn’t playing a great joke on Garner, creating a satire worthy of Swift.) Wallace writes:

Garner structures his judgments very carefully to avoid the elitism and anality of traditional SNOOTitude. He does not deploy irony or scorn or caustic wit, nor tropes or colloquialisms or contradictions...or really any sort of verbal style at all. [...] It’s like he’s so bland he’s barely there.

In other words, Wallace is saying that Garner can’t be an elitist because he’s banal. Never mind that he excludes the language of minority communities, youth, the dispossessed, and the working class. He can’t be elitist because he doesn’t engage in the rhetoric of the traditional upper classes. Wallace concludes that Garner’s usage guide is “as Democratic these days as you’re going to get.” In other words, it’s democratic because Garner is a self-appointed autocrat. That’s as Orwellian these days as you’re going to get. 

David Peterson on Invented Languages

31 October 2015

David Peterson is the inventor of a number of languages used in various movies and TV shows, perhaps most famously Dothraki, the language of the nomadic horse people in Game of Thrones. This video is of a recent talk he gave at Google on how he, and others, create fictional languages. The depth of linguistic knowledge required in this craft and the art in how he applies it to create realistic languages is quite amazing.

The video is an hour long, but well worth it.