Sunday, March 19, 2017

How the Meanings of Words Change



How the Meanings of Words Change


Stick around long enough and you'll notice that language changes—whether you like it or not. Consider this recent report from columnist Martha Gill on the redefinition of the word literally:
It's happened. Literally the most misused word in the language has officially changed definition. Now as well as meaning "in a literal manner or sense; exactly: 'the driver took it literally when asked to go straight over the traffic circle,'" various dictionaries have added its other more recent usage. As Google puts it, "literally" can be used "to acknowledge that something is not literally true but is used for emphasis or to express strong feeling." . . .

"Literally," you see, in its development from knock-kneed, single-purpose utterance, to swan-like dual-purpose term, has reached that awkward stage. It is neither one nor the other, and it can't do anything right."
(Martha Gill, "Have We Literally Broken the English Language?" The Guardian [UK], August 13, 2013)
Changes in word meanings (a process called semantic shift) happen for various reasons and in various ways. Four common types of change are broadening, narrowing, amelioration, and pejoration. (For more detailed discussions of these processes, click on the highlighted terms.)
  • Broadening
    Also known as generalization or extension, broadening is the process by which a word's meaning becomes more inclusive than an earlier meaning. In Old English, for instance, the word dog referred to just one particular breed, and thing meant a public assembly. In contemporary English, of course, dog can refer to any hairy, barking, four-legged creature, and thing can refer to, well, anything.
  • Narrowing
    The opposite of broadening is narrowing (also called specialization or restriction), a type of semantic change in which a word's meaning becomes less inclusive. For example, in Middle English, deer could refer to any animal, and girl could mean a young person of either sex.
  • Amelioration
    Amelioration refers to the upgrading or rise in status of a word's meaning. For example, meticulous once meant "fearful or timid," and sensitive meant simply "capable of using one's senses."
  • Pejoration
    More common than amelioration is the downgrading or depreciation of a word's meaning, a process called pejoration. The adjective silly, for instance, once meant "blessed" or "innocent," officious meant "hard working," and aggravate meant to "increase the weight" of something.
Over the course of time, words "slip-slide in all directions," says linguist Jean Aitchison, and for that reason "traditional lists of causes" (such as the list above) can "reduce semantic change to the level of stamp collecting, an assembly of colourful bits and pieces" (Language Change: Progress Or Decay? 2013).

What's worth keeping in mind is that meanings don't change over night. Different senses of the same word often overlap, and new meanings can co-exist with older meanings for centuries. In linguistic terms, polysemy is the rule, not the exception.

"Words are by nature incurably fuzzy," says Aitchison. And in recent years the adverb literally has become exceptionally fuzzy. In fact, it has slipped into the rare category of Janus words, joining terms like sanction, bolt, and fix that contain opposite or contradictory meanings.

Martha Gill concludes that there's not much we can do about literally, "other than avoid it completely." The awkward stage that it's going through may last for quite some time. "It is a moot word," she says. "We just have to leave it up in its bedroom for a while until it grows up a bit."

Saturday, March 18, 2017

100 Irregular Plural Nouns in English




The plural form of wolf is wolves. Guy Edwardes/Getty Images

There are no easy rules, unfortunately, for irregular plurals in English. They simply have to be learnt and remembered.
(S. Curtis and M. Manser, The Penguin Writer's Manual, 2002)

Most English nouns form their plural by adding either -s (books, bands, bells) or -es (boxes, bunches, batches). These plural forms are said to follow a regular pattern.
 
But not all nouns conform to this standard pattern. In fact, some of the most common English nouns have irregular plural forms--such as woman/women and child/children.
(The reasons for this are briefly discussed in the article Plural Forms of English Nouns.) In addition, several nouns have alternative plurals, one regular and the other irregular.

In regard to these alternative forms, there are no strict rules to guide our use of them:

People have to learn which form to use as they meet the words for the first time, and must become aware of variations in usage. When there is a choice, the classical [irregular] plural is usually the more technical, learned, or formal, as in the case of formulas vs formulae or curriculums vs curricula. Sometimes, alternative plurals have even developed different senses, as in the cases of (spirit) mediums vs (mass) media, or appendixes (in bodies or books) vs appendices (only in books).
(David Crystal, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language, 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2003)

As you'll see in the list that follows, many words with irregular plurals are loanwords that have kept their foreign plural forms (or at least held on to those forms as alternatives to regular English plurals).

List of 100 Irregular Plural Nouns in English

In the list below, you'll find singular noun forms in the left column and the corresponding plural forms in the right column. When a noun has more than one plural form, the irregular one appears first, though that doesn't necessarily mean that the irregular form is more widely accepted than the regular form.
SOURCES: The plural forms in this list are recognized by Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (2003) and The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (2011).

addendum
addenda or addendums
aircraft
aircraft
alumna
alumnae
alumnus
alumni
analysis
analyses
antenna
antennae or antennas
antitheses
apex
apices or apexes
appendices or appendixes
axis
axes


bacillus
bacilli
bacterium
bacteria
basis
bases
beau
beaux or beaus
bison
bison
bureau
bureaux or bureaus


cactus
cacti or cactus or cactuses
château
châteaux or châteaus
child
children
codex
codices
concerto
concerti or concertos
corpora
crisis
crises
criteria or criterions
curriculum
curricula or curriculums


datum
data
deer
deer or deers
diagnosis
diagnoses
die
dice or dies
dwarf
dwarves or dwarfs


ellipses
erratum
errata


faux pas
faux pas
fez
fezzes or fezes
fish
fish or fishes
focus
foci or focuses
foot
feet or foot
formula
formulae or formulas
fungus
fungi or funguses


genus
genera or genuses
goose
geese
graffito
graffiti
grouse
grouse or grouses


half
halves
hoof
hooves or hoofs
hypothesis
hypotheses


index
indices or indexes


larva
larvae or larvas
libretto
libretti or librettos
loaf
loaves
locus
loci
louse
lice


man
men
matrix
matrices or matrixes
media or mediums
memoranda or memorandums
minutia
minutiae
moose
moose
mouse
mice


nebula
nebulae or nebulas
nucleus
nuclei or nucleuses


oasis
oases
offspring
offspring or offsprings
opus
opera or opuses
ovum
ova
ox
oxen or ox


parentheses
phenomenon
phenomena or phenomenons
phylum
phyla
prognosis
prognoses


quiz
quizzes


radius
radii or radiuses
referendum
referenda or referendums


salmon
salmon or salmons
scarf
scarves or scarfs
self
selves
series
series
sheep
sheep
shrimp
shrimp or shrimps
species
species
stimulus
stimuli
stratum
strata
swine
swine
syllabus
syllabi or syllabuses
symposium
symposia or symposiums
synopses


tableau
tableaux or tableaus
theses
thief
thieves
tooth
teeth
trout
trout or trouts
tuna
tuna or tunas


vertebra
vertebrae or vertebras
vertex
vertices or vertexes
vita
vitae
vortex
vortices or vortexes


wharf
wharves or wharfs
wife
wives
wolf
wolves
woman
women