Tuesday, 1 April 2014

Task



Henry Hitchings on language change and the key arguments

Henry Hitchings tells us that:  “It seems as if no day passes without an argument over the English language and its ‘proper’ use.”

We’ve all seen that many people get very worked up about how the language is used (or abused), and the concerns range from spelling and punctuation in writing, to abbreviations in text messages, right up to some of the most common features of spoken language, such as fillers and tag questions 

Key: one person’s LOL is often another person’s WTF?. 

If you’re an A2 English Language student you’ll no doubt have come across what are termed prescriptive and descriptive views of language: arguments on one side that tell us how we should use language, and, on the other, arguments that focus instead on linguistic description. This isn’t a recent debate either. As Hitchings tells us, language has been a battleground for centuries. 

Prescriptivists complaining of particular uses: Tag questions e.g. ‘innit’
Ongoing complaints of: New words, accents, foreign influence on English, way punctuation  is used.

Identifies 2 types of prescriptivism:

 - One is motivated by desire for use of language effectively and consistently.

- Second is a group with anxiety about larger social issues; link to ‘broken window’ thesis where if you don’t mend the straightforward things, bigger problems will emerge.
If the users battle of standard English, larger problems will occur as a secondary cause.  


Dan Clayton is a Senior Examiner for AQA A English Language and a research fellow at The Survey of English Usage at UCL.