Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,573,952 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

A rant against illogical, but widely accepted, language misusages.


I consider myself as tolerant, even as liberal, as the next person when it comes to accepting a new idiom entering the language--idiom being, in one dictionary definition, "an expression whose meaning is not predictable from the usual meanings of its constituent elements."

But I cannot tolerate the casual acceptance of sloppy word usages that defy logic or etymology etymology (ĕtĭmŏl`əjē), branch of linguistics that investigates the history, development, and origin of words. It was this study that chiefly revealed the regular relations of sounds in the Indo-European languages (as described . Here are my four leading candidates, leading off with one recently cited by the language maven William Safire William L. Safire (born December 17, 1929) is an American author, semi-retired columnist, and former journalist and presidential speechwriter.

He is perhaps best known as a long-time syndicated political columnist for The New York Times
 in his New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times Sunday language column:

* Morph morph 1  
n.
An allomorph.



[From morpheme.]


morph 2  
n.
: It's a delightful sound, morph, which may account for the sudden popularity of this shortened version of metamorphosis or the back-formed verb metamorphose. It's now commonly used to mean change, as in, "Following the election, the moderate Democrat morphed into a conservative one."

The only problem, though, as Safire pointed out, is that morph is derived from the wrong half of the word. Morph comes from the Greek meaning "form" or "structure." It's the meta part that carries the meaning of "change," also from the Greek, meaning "after," "beyond," and "after."

But meta'd doesn't roll off the tongue as easily as morph, and change is apparently too pedestrian, too old-fashioned.

Podium: Here's another case of ignoring obvious etymology, using podium in place of lectern. Whenever I read, "He pounded the podium to make his point," I picture a pitiful person on his hands and knees slamming his fists on a platform.

Pod-, the dictionary says, is "a learned borrowing from the Greek meaning 'foot,' used in the formation of compound words." Think podiatrist Podiatrist
A physician who specializes in the medical care and treatment of the human foot.

Mentioned in: Shin Splints

podiatrist 
.

Lectern, on the other hand, comes to us from the Latin word legere, meaning to "gather, select, read." Think lecture.

* Center around: No etymology lessons needed here; this phrase is just plain illogical. A center is a point; something centers on or centers in something else. If you like the word around, use circle around or revolve around Verb 1. revolve around - center upon; "Her entire attention centered on her children"; "Our day revolved around our work"
center, center on, concentrate on, focus on, revolve about
.

Center around makes about as much sense as zigzag along a straight line.

* Literally: This adverb adverb: see part of speech; adjective.  is now probably used more as an intensifier in·ten·si·fi·er  
n. Grammar
See intensive.


intensifier
Noun

a word, esp. an adjective or adverb, that intensifies the meaning of the word or phrase that it modifies, for example, very
 meaning, as the dictionary has it, "in effect, virtually," than as an adverb meaning "in the literal or strict sense."

But it still grates when I read something like, "My stocks literally went into the toilet."

Department of lost causes

I realize, of course, that all of these are lost causes.

Morph is too likable and colloquial col·lo·qui·al  
adj.
1. Characteristic of or appropriate to the spoken language or to writing that seeks the effect of speech; informal.

2. Relating to conversation; conversational.
 to go away soon.

I've seen center around in The New Yorker and The New Times, both supposedly carefully edited.

The dictionary gives lectern as the third definition of podium,

Literally's fourth definition is "in effect, virtually."

But in my lonely defense, I must point out that most usage dictionaries point out that, in each of these cases, "the most careful writers" will avoid these words with morphed meanings.
COPYRIGHT 2005 The Newsletter on Newsletters LLC
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Editing
Author:Swift, Paul
Publication:The Newsletter on Newsletters
Date:Mar 17, 2005
Words:467
Previous Article:Wallace Forbes, in and out of Forbes newsletters, and then in again.
Next Article:Do You Speak American?



Related Articles
REFEREES AREN'T PERFECT AND THAT'S OK.
Logic Made Easy: How to Know When Language Deceives You.
Liberal & loving it: Al Franken & Air America.
Reader comments from www.advocate.com.
Paul Smith re "The trouble with Islam".
Baptist preaching and Baptist preachers--past and present.
Nicola Lopez: Irvine Contemporary Art.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles