Friday, March 2, 2012

Words Words Words


Words. Squiggles on a page that, through years of being told they have meaning…have meaning. In literature theory, we talked about how words are broken down into 3 parts, the signifier, signified, and the indexical. Now, I love language and learning about origins of the word. This is one of the reasons I enjoyed taking Latin as a language in high school. 
Now, when we were being taught about the 3 different parts we used the word Pen as our subject. We talked about how there was the signifier, the three letters P,E, and N standing next to each other with a space on both sides of them. Then there is the signified, which is the meaning of the word “pen” you think about using it to take notes in class, write a letter, maybe spin around your fingers if the lecture is particularly boring. Finally there is the indexical, the physical object that we call a “pen.”
            This immediately brought me back to my grade school days when I read the book Frindle, by Andrew Clements. For those of you who don’t know about this book I will give a quick summary.  Nick is a 5th grader with a very disliked English teacher. To make time pass at the end of class one day he asks her where the origin of words comes from. She tells him to write a paper on it. After he does this he comes up with a new word, frindle.  A frindle is what Nick started calling pens. This soon caught on not only in his class, but also across the nation. His teacher hated the word frindle because she thought it was insulting to the history that the word “pen” has. (In French penne means bird’s feather or quill, which was an early form of a pen.) This book showed that how we place meaning is extremely powerful. Had Nick’s friends not jumped in and said ‘a pen is a frindle and a frindle is a pen” then the word would have died out.
            I learned this first hand when last year I had just gone for a run and my legs were killing me, I then had to climb two flights of stairs. While slowly walking up the stairs I was complaining to a friend about how I hate stairs, hated them so much that I was going to call them “stecs” cause that word seemed to me at the time, better suited.  This caught on with my friends for about a week but died out. Now when I complain about stairs, my friends ask me if I mean “stecs”
            Now moving onto a new topic entirely. I started thinking about how we use abbreviations. I also realized that abbreviations could, in a way, be broken down into the 3 parts.  Bare with me for a sec. Let’s take the example, “etc.” We have the signifier, “etc” we have the signified, the meaning placed on the letters, “and all the other things” then we have the Indexical, “et cetera.” Now I know the words “et cetera” isn’t a physical thing. But let’s pretend that words are a physical thing, just so that my theory works out.
            I then realized how over years this style of abbreviating word first started to strengthen the English language, and in recent years, regressed back to the Stone Age.  Now I’m sure you’re wondering, “whooh what? Tell me how? That can’t be true can it?” Yes, it’s true. Now calm down and let me explain. Abbreviations are often used when you need to say a long word but need to say it quickly. This is most often used my doctors, using EKG instead of the German word Elektrokardiogramm. Slowly, however, this concept bled into pop culture and teenage word play. Best friends became BF, and as social networking picked up and people started texting. “See you later” became “C U later”, “I love you” became “I luv you” Oh my God became “OMG” and %$#@ you became F U” Now, in this case, I become a lot like Mrs. Grangers from Frindle, I hate that we are butchering language to such an extreme.
            This is why I enjoy going to websites like failbook.com or happyface.com and reading people correcting spelling on facebook statuses. I do this simply because it remind me that there are people just like me out there that actually care about the words they use.  Here is an example of one.  In one of my favorite ones, the status says “how do u make wknds longer? “ the first comment was “spell it properly and you get ‘weekends’ is that long enough for you?”


Now I'm not saying that misspelling a word is the worst thing in the word. I'm an English major and I have to admit that I slip up when I'm not paying attention. But please, don't willingly butcher the English language.

Now I’ve been ranting for a while now so I’m going to end it by saying please uses proper English.  Words have a lot of power and they get that power by how we use them. Let’s end the stereotype that American only know one language and don’t even know that one well.

4 comments:

  1. I know exactly what you mean when you talk about using English properly and correcting others' spelling and grammar. I had a friend that would consistently tell me he, "Seen that movie" or something along those lines and it drove me insane!

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  2. I found this to be funny and entertaining but also very true at the same time. I liked the relationship you used and the way you reflected about the signifier and the signified because it makes the theory very relatable to many every day things that we are exposed to.

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  3. I definitely got a kick out of the link at the end. I can sympathize with the frustration of people making up their own modifications to words. I read an article in Time a few years back that talked about how the current younger generation is having significantly more difficulty in English classes because they have cell phones and facebook at an early age, and they tend to write by saying things like "OMG I luv u bff, c u l8tr!" I think you could take your aggravation and take it one step further, and maybe talk a little bit about how this different style of writing fits in with your initial point about signifier, signified. After all, even though you dislike the facebook stuff you see, you yourself admitted to making up nonsensical words.

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  4. The link was hilarious! I can completely understand the annoyance when people spell things incorrectly or decide to make up abbreviations. Even though it is frustrating, I myself have used things too, making me a contributor to the ever changing language. I guess it is changing but definitely not in an intelligent way

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