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Coronavirus is wrecking the English language Thread poster: Tom in London
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Tom in London United Kingdom Local time: 04:05 Member (2008) Italian to English TOPIC STARTER
Joe France wrote: Do you not think that, given the severity of the situation, a little linguistic flexibility is the least we can do? No. If I have to do extra work to interpret someone's illiteracy (in their own language) into something comprehensible, that is unacceptable (since the whole purpose of using language is to communicate comprehensibly). | | |
Lingua 5B Bosnia and Herzegovina Local time: 05:05 Member (2009) English to Croatian + ...
Tom in London wrote: Joe France wrote: Do you not think that, given the severity of the situation, a little linguistic flexibility is the least we can do? No. If I have to do extra work to interpret someone's illiteracy (in their own language) into something comprehensible, that is unacceptable (since the whole purpose of using language is to communicate comprehensibly). Do you know how comprehension of newly coined terms is measured? Please advise if you do. | | |
Tom in London United Kingdom Local time: 04:05 Member (2008) Italian to English TOPIC STARTER
Lingua 5B wrote: Do you know how comprehension of newly coined terms is measured? Please advise if you do. I am not aware of any method for measuring comprehension (e.g. 100%, 80%, 10%) or - better - comprehensibility. Are you? | | |
Mervyn Henderson (X) Spain Local time: 05:05 Spanish to English + ... Someone's ... | Mar 25, 2020 |
... going home today with a note. I just knowed it. And Joe had better watch his step too.
[Edited at 2020-03-25 11:11 GMT] | |
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Emily Gilby United Kingdom Local time: 04:05 Member (2018) French to English + ... Only natural? | Mar 25, 2020 |
New words and new ways to use existing words are being created by situations just like this one and being added into the dictionary all the time as they are frequently being used and therefore enter the language. Isn't this how language evolves? We change the way we speak and how we use words over time, otherwise we'd still be speaking the same way as we did in the 1500s. | | |
Mervyn Henderson (X) Spain Local time: 05:05 Spanish to English + ... |
Lingua 5B Bosnia and Herzegovina Local time: 05:05 Member (2009) English to Croatian + ... Yes I am aware of methodologies. | Mar 25, 2020 |
Tom in London wrote: Lingua 5B wrote: Do you know how comprehension of newly coined terms is measured? Please advise if you do. I am not aware of any method for measuring comprehension (e.g. 100%, 80%, 10%) or - better - comprehensibility. Are you? The methodologies are not based on subjective preferences of individuals. Generally it's measured on large groups of people and it's very randomized (sex, age, education level, profession etc) the individuals surveyed should come from varied backgrounds and each of them is interviewed individually re. how comprehensive it is to them. There is a minimum number of individuals to survey depending on context, field, term, etc. Then the median results are obtained and taken as relevant. So you alone and your opinion alone would not have any impact or validity here, sorry.
[Edited at 2020-03-25 12:18 GMT] | | |
Joe France United Kingdom Local time: 04:05 Member (2016) German to English + ... I've been told | Mar 25, 2020 |
Mervyn Henderson wrote: And Joe had better watch his step too.
[Edited at 2020-03-25 11:11 GMT] I know, I'll scuttle off, tail between my legs. You might have thought that the phrase becoming common usage among the British public would be a sign that it's actually easy to understand, easy to use in conversation, and helping people understand the action to take in a public health emergency. But, of course, you would be wrong... | |
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Social distancing | Mar 25, 2020 |
Mervyn Henderson wrote: You never know - soon "to social distance" may evolve to become "to socialdistance". Both of them rather ugly, though, I agree. Or are we nitpicking here? As opposed to nit picking, of course. I must admit I've already used "socialdistancing" in an ironic fashion. But in the circumstances I think the two words should probably stay apart. | | |
Lingua 5B Bosnia and Herzegovina Local time: 05:05 Member (2009) English to Croatian + ... Precisely, it's actually very simple to gauge. | Mar 25, 2020 |
Joe France wrote: You might have thought that the phrase becoming common usage among the British public would be a sign that it's actually easy to understand, easy to use in conversation, and helping people understand the action to take in a public health emergency. But, of course, you would be wrong... Yes, that's a sign the phrase is functional and is doing its job. | | |
Tom in London United Kingdom Local time: 04:05 Member (2008) Italian to English TOPIC STARTER Unfortunately | Mar 25, 2020 |
Lingua 5B wrote: ...the phrase is functional and is doing its job. Unfortunately it's also redundant; the English language already has an abundance of ways in which to express the same concept, none of them as ugly, or so grinding on the eye and ear, as the absurd new verb "to social distance" which is as bad as another recent verb "to rough sleep".
[Edited at 2020-03-25 12:38 GMT] | | |
Tom in London United Kingdom Local time: 04:05 Member (2008) Italian to English TOPIC STARTER No need to be impolite. | Mar 25, 2020 |
Lingua 5B wrote: ...ou alone and your opinion alone would not have any impact or validity here, sorry. You can't possibly be sorry because the same applies - of course - to yourself. | |
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Lingua 5B Bosnia and Herzegovina Local time: 05:05 Member (2009) English to Croatian + ... Two meters apart yes. | Mar 25, 2020 |
Chris S wrote: Mervyn Henderson wrote: You never know - soon "to social distance" may evolve to become "to socialdistance". Both of them rather ugly, though, I agree. Or are we nitpicking here? As opposed to nit picking, of course. I must admit I've already used "socialdistancing" in an ironic fashion. But in the circumstances I think the two words should probably stay apart. Use tab five times in between them. | | |
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I will desocialise myself from the dogfight in this topic, which is unlikely to lead anywhere, with no intention of resocialising in that respect. Incidentally, these verbs, due to their Latin origin, would be usable in many languages. | | |
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