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This is a discussion on Language within the Coffee Room forums, part of the The House of Commons category; Hep Cat Cool Dude Slick Bitch Ma Bitch Bruv blood nigga Whatever happened to the English language? It evolved and ...

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    Language

    Hep Cat

    Cool Dude

    Slick Bitch

    Ma Bitch

    Bruv

    blood

    nigga

    Whatever happened to the English language? It evolved and included many languages and nations. The average Daily Mail reader will unconsciously use language from the countries who brought such so-called abominations to us while they complain about them.

    It is important that we communicate clearly and our language has assimilated much in that regard. We have many types of language that we use from, romantic, baby talk, what we use with our 'homies' perhaps?

    We also have a very clear business talk, which is very clear in our formal letters...to whom it may concern...followed by such godawfull passivity as 'I find myself incandescent' like it was a surprise! and ending with expressions of faithfullness. We are not teaching this in our schools however.

    We are reminded often in a world of increasing internet dependancy that our written word is different to our spoken one and can be easily misinterpreted.

    Teenagers have a language they use amongst their own wierd breed, yet are not being taught to be bilingual in order to bridge the gap between the 'I axe him' to their friends and the 'may I ask you' to a potential employer.

    At worst the backlash would result in yet again Regional accents and sayings being deemed unacceptable.

    What we are not teaching is how to use, manipulate and appreciate language in its sound and rhythm to actually say anything

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    Can one word sum up this decade?

    Very appropriate to this thread is this recent article from the BBC Magazine : BBC News - Can one word sum up this decade?

    As we enter the last few weeks of the 2000s, the Magazine is enlisting readers to tell the story of the last 10 years, based on five themes. Wordsmith Susie Dent begins the series with some suggestions for "words of the decade".

    Language, as an American lexicographer once neatly put it, "is an uncompromising mirror... an untouched record of the thoughts, feelings, successes, failures, and intent of the people".

    We are what we say, and as a shorthand summary of a single event or period in time, a word or phrase that came into prominence is hard to beat.

    This opening decade of the 2000s - for which the nickname Noughties ultimately pipped all others - has generated a wealth of new words, and their resonance is likely to provoke strong memories.

    Some of them are inextricably tied up with single events: 9/11 has become the only reference necessary to describe the terrorist attacks against America in 2001, events which spawned many further expressions, including axis of evil and moral crusade as well as allegations of sexing up and dodgy dossiers. More recently the current Great Recession has spawned a bemusing lexicon full of toxic debt and quantitative easing.

    Neologisms - brand new words - speak strongly for the times they were coined for, even the fun ones. Bling characterised for many the opening years of the century, the perfect description of a celebrity- (or nonebrity-) obsessed culture intent on being as flashy as the people it idolised. Social networking has added a new flavour to our language: Twitter alone has given us tweets, twitts - even tweet-ups among the Twitterati.

    Poking, to take just one word from the Facebook lexicon, is not a new word - it has simply taken on a new sense.

    In fact many, if not most, of our "new" words are born of the same process of reinvention, including what is undoubtedly one of the most prominent words of the century thus far: chav. Once a Romany word meaning "child" (chavi) more than 150 years ago, it was relaunched quite spectacularly in 2005 when it became one of the most powerful (and derogatory) social labels in recent memory.

    Some little-known terms also gained higher profile: as 2004 ended, the Asian tsunami forced a word unknown to many into the everyday vocabulary of millions. Closer to home, few people would have known about water bowsers - or predicted their value to thousands of flood-affected Britons in the summer of 2007.

    Green has been indisputably the colour of the decade, leaving its carbon footprint across its years and prompting, among so much else, the arrival of Britain's first eco-towns. The threat of ecological disaster has been joined this year by fears of swine flu - itself overtaking the nightmare possibilities of H5N1 - and of an epidemic of globesity.

    These are just some of the words characterising the last 10 years - there are many more to choose from and this is where you come in.

    We want you to choose your word or words of the decade.

    There is some flexibility about what kind of words and phrases are allowed, as long as they are actually used (does anyone really say staycation or is just a journalistic invention?). Proprietary names are also fine - we are, after all, the iPod generation.

    Acronyms like Asbo or initialisms like WMD are acceptable, but people's names are not admissible (you can have your say about people of the decade on Tuesday), unless they transcend their names, as in Blairism or the Jade effect.

    Otherwise, the choice is all yours. As a meerkat would say, simples.
    "Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised 'for the good of its victims' may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us 'for our own good' will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." -- C.S. Lewis

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    Isn't this all a bit pointless. Just get a copy of the Oxford Dictionary of Idioms or spend some time on the Urban Dictionary website: Urban Dictionary, December 10: Wiper Beat

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