Anne Curzan : What makes a word "real"?

7

I need to start by telling you a little bit

about my social life,

which I know may not seem relevant,

but it is.

When people meet me at parties

and they find out that I'm an English professor

who specializes in language,

they generally have one of two reactions.

One set of people look frightened. (Laughter)

They often say something like,

"Oh, I'd better be careful what I say.

I'm sure you'll hear every mistake I make."

And then they stop talking. (Laughter)

And they wait for me to go away

and talk to someone else.

The other set of people,

their eyes light up,

and they say,

"You are just the person I want to talk to."

And then they tell me about whatever it is

they think is going wrong with the English language.

(Laughter)

A couple of weeks ago, I was at a dinner party

and the man to my right

started telling me about all the ways

that the Internet is degrading the English language.

He brought up Facebook, and he said,

"To defriend? I mean, is that even a real word?"

I want to pause on that question:

What makes a word real?

My dinner companion and I both know

what the verb "defriend" means,

so when does a new word like "defriend"

become real?

Who has the authority to make those kinds

of official decisions about words, anyway?

Those are the questions I want to talk about today.

I think most people, when they say a word isn't real,

what they mean is, it doesn't appear

in a standard dictionary.

That, of course, raises a host of other questions,

including, who writes dictionaries?

Before I go any further,

let me clarify my role in all of this.

I do not write dictionaries.

I do, however, collect new words

much the way dictionary editors do,

and the great thing about being a historian

of the English language

is that I get to call this "research."

When I teach the history of the English language,

I require that students teach me

two new slang words before I will begin class.

Over the years, I have learned

some great new slang this way,

including "hangry," which --

(Applause) —

which is when you are cranky or angry

because you are hungry,

and "adorkable,"

which is when you are adorable

in kind of a dorky way,

clearly, terrific words that fill

important gaps in the English language.

(Laughter)

But how real are they

if we use them primarily as slang

and they don't yet appear in a dictionary?

With that, let's turn to dictionaries.

I'm going to do this as a show of hands:

How many of you still regularly

refer to a dictionary, either print or online?

Okay, so that looks like most of you.

Now, a second question. Again, a show of hands:

How many of you have ever looked to see

who edited the dictionary you are using?

Okay, many fewer.

At some level, we know that there are human hands

behind dictionaries,

but we're really not sure who those hands belong to.

I'm actually fascinated by this.

Even the most critical people out there

tend not to be very critical about dictionaries,

not distinguishing among them

and not asking a whole lot of questions

about who edited them.

Just think about the phrase

"Look it up in the dictionary,"

which suggests that all dictionaries

are exactly the same.

Consider the library here on campus,

where you go into the reading room,

and there is a large, unabridged dictionary

up on a pedestal in this place of honor and respect

lying open so we can go stand before it

to get answers.

Now, don't get me wrong,

dictionaries are fantastic resources,

but they are human

and they are not timeless.

I'm struck as a teacher

that we tell students to critically question

every text they read, every website they visit,

except dictionaries,

which we tend to treat as un-authored,

as if they came from nowhere to give us answers

about what words really mean.

Here's the thing: If you ask dictionary editors,

what they'll tell you

is they're just trying to keep up with us

as we change the language.

They're watching what we say and what we write

and trying to figure out what's going to stick

and what's not going to stick.

They have to gamble,

because they want to appear cutting edge

and catch the words that are going to make it,

such as LOL,

but they don't want to appear faddish

and include the words that aren't going to make it,

and I think a word that they're watching right now

is YOLO, you only live once.

Now I get to hang out with dictionary editors,

and you might be surprised

by one of the places where we hang out.

Every January, we go

to the American Dialect Society annual meeting,

where among other things,

we vote on the word of the year.

There are about 200 or 300 people who come,

some of the best known linguists in the United States.

To give you a sense of the flavor of the meeting,

it occurs right before happy hour.

Anyone who comes can vote.

The most important rule is

that you can vote with only one hand.

In the past, some of the winners have been

"tweet" in 2009

and "hashtag" in 2012.

"Chad" was the word of the year in the year 2000,

because who knew what a chad was before 2000,

and "WMD" in 2002.

Now, we have other categories in which we vote too,

and my favorite category

is most creative word of the year.

Past winners in this category have included

"recombobulation area,"

which is at the Milwaukee Airport after security,

where you can recombobulate.

(Laughter)

You can put your belt back on,

put your computer back in your bag.

And then my all-time favorite word at this vote,

which is "multi-slacking."

(Laughter)

And multi-slacking is the act

of having multiple windows up on your screen

so it looks like you're working

when you're actually goofing around on the web.

(Laughter) (Applause)

Will all of these words stick? Absolutely not.

And we have made some questionable choices,

for example in 2006

when the word of the year was "Plutoed,"

to mean demoted.

(Laughter)

But some of the past winners

now seem completely unremarkable,

such as "app"

and "e" as a prefix,

and "google" as a verb.

Now, a few weeks before our vote,

Lake Superior State University

issues its list of banished words for the year.

What is striking about this

is that there's actually often quite a lot of overlap

between their list and the list that we are considering

for words of the year,

and this is because we're noticing the same thing.

We're noticing words that are coming into prominence.

It's really a question of attitude.

Are you bothered by language fads and language change,

or do you find it fun, interesting,

something worthy of study

as part of a living language?

The list by Lake Superior State University

continues a fairly long tradition in English

of complaints about new words.

So here is Dean Henry Alford in 1875,

who was very concerned that "desirability"

is really a terrible word.

In 1760, Benjamin Franklin

wrote a letter to David Hume

giving up the word "colonize" as bad.

Over the years, we've also seen worries

about new pronunciations.

Here is Samuel Rogers in 1855

who is concerned about some fashionable pronunciations

that he finds offensive,

and he says "as if contemplate were not bad enough,

balcony makes me sick."

(Laughter)

The word is borrowed in from Italian

and it was pronounced bal-COE-nee.

These complaints now strike us as quaint,

if not downright adorkable -- (Laughter) --

but here's the thing:

we still get quite worked up about language change.

I have an entire file in my office

of newspaper articles

which express concern about illegitimate words

that should not have been included in the dictionary,

including "LOL"

when it got into the Oxford English Dictionary

and "defriend"

when it got into the Oxford American Dictionary.

I also have articles expressing concern

about "invite" as a noun,

"impact" as a verb,

because only teeth can be impacted,

and "incentivize" is described

as "boorish, bureaucratic misspeak."

Now, it's not that dictionary editors

ignore these kinds of attitudes about language.

They try to provide us some guidance about words

that are considered slang or informal

or offensive, often through usage labels,

but they're in something of a bind,

because they're trying to describe what we do,

and they know that we often go to dictionaries

to get information about how we should use a word

well or appropriately.

In response, the American Heritage Dictionaries

include usage notes.

Usage notes tend to occur with words

that are troublesome in one way,

and one of the ways that they can be troublesome

is that they're changing meaning.

Now usage notes involve very human decisions,

and I think, as dictionary users,

we're often not as aware of those human decisions

as we should be.

To show you what I mean,

we'll look at an example, but before we do,

I want to explain what the dictionary editors

are trying to deal with in this usage note.

Think about the word "peruse"

and how you use that word.

I would guess many of you are thinking

of skim, scan, reading quickly.

Some of you may even have some walking involved,

because you're perusing grocery store shelves,

or something like that.

You might be surprised to learn

that if you look in most standard dictionaries,

the first definition will be to read carefully,

or pore over.

American Heritage has that as the first definition.

They then have, as the second definition, skim,

and next to that, they say "usage problem."

(Laughter)

And then they include a usage note,

which is worth looking at.

So here's the usage note:

"Peruse has long meant 'to read thoroughly'...

But the word is often used more loosely,

to mean simply 'to read.'...

Further extension of the word to mean 'to glance over, skim,'

has traditionally been considered an error,

but our ballot results suggest that it is becoming

somewhat more acceptable.

When asked about the sentence,

'I only had a moment to peruse the manual quickly,'

66 percent of the [Usage] Panel

found it unacceptable in 1988,

58 percent in 1999,

and 48 percent in 2011."

Ah, the Usage Panel,

that trusted body of language authorities

who is getting more lenient about this.

Now, what I hope you're thinking right now is,

"Wait, who's on the Usage Panel?

And what should I do with their pronouncements?"

If you look in the front matter

of American Heritage Dictionaries,

you can actually find the names

of the people on the Usage Panel.

But who looks at the front matter of dictionaries?

There are about 200 people on the Usage Panel.

They include academicians,

journalists, creative writers.

There's a Supreme Court justice on it

and a few linguists.

As of 2005, the list includes me.

(Applause)

Here's what we can do for you.

We can give you a sense

of the range of opinions about contested usage.

That is and should be the extent of our authority.

We are not a language academy.

About once a year, I get a ballot

that asks me about whether new uses,

new pronunciations, new meanings, are acceptable.

Now here's what I do to fill out the ballot.

I listen to what other people are saying and writing.

I do not listen to my own likes

and dislikes about the English language.

I will be honest with you:

I do not like the word "impactful,"

but that is neither here nor there

in terms of whether "impactful" is becoming common usage

and becoming more acceptable in written prose.

So to be responsible,

what I do is go look at usage,

which often involves going to look

at online databases such as Google Books.

Well, if you look for "impactful" in Google Books,

here is what you find.

Well, it sure looks like "impactful"

is proving useful

for a certain number of writers,

and has become more and more useful

over the last 20 years.

Now, there are going to be changes

that all of us don't like in the language.

There are going to be changes where you think,

"Really?

Does the language have to change that way?"

What I'm saying is,

we should be less quick

to decide that that change is terrible,

we should be less quick to impose

our likes and dislikes about words on other people,

and we should be entirely reluctant

to think that the English language is in trouble.

It's not. It is rich and vibrant and filled

with the creativity of the speakers who speak it.

In retrospect, we think it's fascinating

that the word "nice" used to mean silly,

and that the word "decimate"

used to mean to kill one in every 10.

(Laughter)

We think that Ben Franklin was being silly

to worry about "notice" as a verb.

Well, you know what?

We're going to look pretty silly in a hundred years

for worrying about "impact" as a verb

and "invite" as a noun.

The language is not going to change so fast

that we can't keep up.

Language just doesn't work that way.

I hope that what you can do

is find language change not worrisome

but fun and fascinating,

just the way dictionary editors do.

I hope you can enjoy being part

of the creativity that is continually remaking

our language and keeping it robust.

So how does a word get into a dictionary?

It gets in because we use it

and we keep using it,

and dictionary editors are paying attention to us.

If you're thinking, "But that lets all of us decide

what words mean,"

I would say, "Yes it does,

and it always has."

Dictionaries are a wonderful guide and resource,

but there is no objective dictionary authority out there

that is the final arbiter about what words mean.

If a community of speakers is using a word

and knows what it means, it's real.

That word might be slangy,

that word might be informal,

that word might be a word that you think

is illogical or unnecessary,

but that word that we're using,

that word is real.

Thank you.

(Applause)