What is it with people on this site and their fear of a language evolving?Queen Michael said:The Merriam-Webster now recognizes "in effect, virtually" as a definition of "literally." No, really. You can check it here, [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literally] and read an article on the subject over here. [http://www.salon.com/2013/08/22/according_to_the_dictionary_literally_now_also_means_figuratively_newscred/] So in other words, it's purportedly no longer wrong to say "I'm so hungry I could literally eat a horse."
What are your thoughts on this blasphemy against all that is holy?
Eh, same thing with decimate, a word that means "to reduce by 10%" has now morphed into meaning "ultimate destruction and defeat of your forces by the enemy!!"TheIceQueen said:I get that language changes over time as people use it, but why this? Literally has ever been the opposite of figuratively. Language changes, but this isn't so much a change, rather twisting and misusing it.
People's pet peeves with this aren't on how proper the usage of the word is. It's on how implementing a colloquial usage of the word as a standard definition that completely contradicts or obfuscates the original meaning undermines the entire point of making a standardized dictionary in the first place. Words start out with literal meanings, and it is literally the purpose of the dictionary to represent these meanings as the standard. Figurative language in general cannot exist without the words having a literal basis from which to start. Urban dictionaries derive from standardized dictionaries; they don't equate to them.thaluikhain said:Eh, I could care less.
Yes, it's annoying, but there's no "proper" way of speaking English. Languages change naturally over time, if enough people start using the word differently, it loses the original meaning. If I was to write this in Old English, people would have a hard time understanding it, for example.
OTOH, if people say "cookie" when they mean "biscuit" I will glass them. That's not on.
Do large numbers of people use those words that way?fieryshadowcard said:Unless you're saying that 'Nobody' should mean both 'Anybody' and 'Everybody.'
Or that objectivity and subjectivity can be applied interchangeably.
Or that when a foreigner trying to learn the language consults a dictionary looking for a proper word for thin, they find fat.
Or that when I say shoe, it's okay that I mean belt.
Well it's ok to talk about testicles as "balls", nevermind that balls are something you can play various sports games with. Or in some cultures the word they use is "egg" to mean testicles. Or how you can use the word Dick to mean a penis, or the short hand name for someone who's birth name is Richard. It can also be used as an insult.fieryshadowcard said:People's pet peeves with this aren't on how proper the usage of the word is. It's on how implementing a colloquial usage of the word as a standard definition that completely contradicts or obfuscates the original meaning undermines the entire point of making a standardized dictionary in the first place. Words start out with literal meanings, and it is literally the purpose of the dictionary to represent these meanings as the standard. Figurative language in general cannot exist without the words having a literal basis from which to start. Urban dictionaries derive from standardized dictionaries; they don't equate to them.thaluikhain said:Eh, I could care less.
Yes, it's annoying, but there's no "proper" way of speaking English. Languages change naturally over time, if enough people start using the word differently, it loses the original meaning. If I was to write this in Old English, people would have a hard time understanding it, for example.
OTOH, if people say "cookie" when they mean "biscuit" I will glass them. That's not on.
The literal usage of a word gives the figurative usage context AND impact. This has nothing to do with language changing so much as it has to do with language having a foundation from which to change.
Unless you're saying that 'Nobody' should mean both 'Anybody' and 'Everybody.'
Or that objectivity and subjectivity can be applied interchangeably.
Or that when a foreigner trying to learn the language consults a dictionary looking for a proper word for thin, they find fat.
Or that when I say shoe, it's okay that I mean belt.
Actually, large numbers of people do use nobody, anybody and everybody interchangeably. But that's a colloquial use, and emphasizes my point. The subsequent examples are not about actual use and weren't meant as such. They're about the precedent set when the official dictionary of a language starts adopting the idea that the inherent meaning of a word also has a contrary meaning, or by association, none at all.thaluikhain said:Do large numbers of people use those words that way?fieryshadowcard said:Unless you're saying that 'Nobody' should mean both 'Anybody' and 'Everybody.'
Or that objectivity and subjectivity can be applied interchangeably.
Or that when a foreigner trying to learn the language consults a dictionary looking for a proper word for thin, they find fat.
Or that when I say shoe, it's okay that I mean belt.
Dictionaries are based on the reality of the way the words are used, not the other way around.
Literally.Johnny Impact said:So what's our go-to word for literally now that literally means not at all? Actually?
I like it. Simple, direct, concise. I second the motion. Humanity, did you hear that? Literally means literally again!Seraj33 said:Literally.Johnny Impact said:So what's our go-to word for literally now that literally means not at all? Actually?
"Language evolving" isn't some perfect defense against all language use complaints. If the meaning of a word changes just because peolpe can't be bothered to understand what it means, that's a different thing from new meanings created by necessity.Seraj33 said:What is it with people on this site and their fear of a language evolving?Queen Michael said:The Merriam-Webster now recognizes "in effect, virtually" as a definition of "literally." No, really. You can check it here, [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literally] and read an article on the subject over here. [http://www.salon.com/2013/08/22/according_to_the_dictionary_literally_now_also_means_figuratively_newscred/] So in other words, it's purportedly no longer wrong to say "I'm so hungry I could literally eat a horse."
What are your thoughts on this blasphemy against all that is holy?
Ive seen it so many times here. "You can't say that! Thats stupid! You can't say it this or that way! They made this an actual defenition? HERESY, PURGE, KILL!!!"
I don't know if you all know this, but English did not look or sound the way it does now, 100 or even 50 years ago.
Languages change, get over it.
They didn't just make this change for shits and giggles people. They made this change because OBVIOUSLY people use the word litterary in this way very often.
you'renevertheonlyone and all that.Jonathan Hornsby said:Am I the only one against fundamentally changing the English language for the benefit of lazy dumbasses who can't be bothered to learn to speak it properly?
And while it might be different, it could adequately be used to describe most linguistic changes.Queen Michael said:"Language evolving" isn't some perfect defense against all language use complaints. If the meaning of a word changes just because peolpe can't be bothered to understand what it means, that's a different thing from new meanings created by necessity.
Lazy dumbasses you say? So James Joyce, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Charles Dickens, Alexander Pope, and Demigod of the English tongue, Vladimir Nabokov are all lazy dumbasses? Some of the greatest authors in the English language are Lazy dumbasses? Riiiiiiiiight. Hey here's a few fun facts about common words in use today.Jonathan Hornsby said:Am I the only one against fundamentally changing the English language for the benefit of lazy dumbasses who can't be bothered to learn to speak it properly?
Well, if the majority of the population uses a word "incorrectly" then who is the one who is incorrect? The point of a language is that the two or more participants of a conversation understands what the other is saying, trying to describe or explain. And there is much more than just WORDS behind understanding. There is tone of voice, the context of the conversation and so on.Queen Michael said:"Language evolving" isn't some perfect defense against all language use complaints. If the meaning of a word changes just because peolpe can't be bothered to understand what it means, that's a different thing from new meanings created by necessity.Seraj33 said:What is it with people on this site and their fear of a language evolving?Queen Michael said:The Merriam-Webster now recognizes "in effect, virtually" as a definition of "literally." No, really. You can check it here, [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literally] and read an article on the subject over here. [http://www.salon.com/2013/08/22/according_to_the_dictionary_literally_now_also_means_figuratively_newscred/] So in other words, it's purportedly no longer wrong to say "I'm so hungry I could literally eat a horse."
What are your thoughts on this blasphemy against all that is holy?
Ive seen it so many times here. "You can't say that! Thats stupid! You can't say it this or that way! They made this an actual defenition? HERESY, PURGE, KILL!!!"
I don't know if you all know this, but English did not look or sound the way it does now, 100 or even 50 years ago.
Languages change, get over it.
They didn't just make this change for shits and giggles people. They made this change because OBVIOUSLY people use the word litterary in this way very often.