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Watch your language. (The Last Word).


September 11 has been a subject much on our minds in the last month. It is not a topic we have strayed far from in the last year--it seems always to be at the periphery of just about every conversation we have had over the last twelve months--but it is a subject we identify in different ways.

Most of us refer to the day, as if on a calendar: "September Eleventh," even though it is not particularly idiomatically id·i·o·mat·ic  
adj.
1.
a. Peculiar to or characteristic of a given language.

b. Characterized by proficient use of idiomatic expressions: a foreigner who speaks idiomatic English.
 correct. Politicians often refer to what happened on September 11, 2001, as "the tragic events of September Eleventh," or some variation on that theme. That's more accurate--when we talk about what happened that day, we are, after all, describing those events. But "the tragic events" phrasing has come to sound canned, and even worse, it's passive. "Events" brings to mind a cocktail party or movie premiere. The tragedy of that day is that thousands of people died because the nation was attacked. But that's a different semantic argument.

For the sake of conversational ease, we have reached a national understanding about how to refer to September 11. The day itself was one of the most important in this country's history, and so we have needed to discuss it in a thousand different contexts, from dinner tables to water coolers to talk radio to bar stools. And in the process, we have decided to refer to the terrorist acts and the destruction and death they caused, simply as September 11.

The problem is that some of us (including network news anchors, the secretary of state, the president) have felt the need to recast "September Eleventh" as "Nine Eleven," or--even worse--"Nine One One." In print, we often see "9/11" instead of "September 11" or even "Sept. 11." We've seen "9/11" in newspaper columns, on Fourth of July Fourth of July, Independence Day, or July Fourth, U.S. holiday, commemorating the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Celebration of it began during the American Revolution.  banners, on new book covers, and on billboards along our highways.

Am I just parsing See parse.

parsing - parser
 words? There are more important things for us to worry about right now--Iraq, double-dip recession double-dip recession

An extended decline in economic activity following an aborted recovery from a previous recession. A relatively weak economic recovery sometimes causes investors to worry about the economy entering another recession.
, homeland security Noun 1. Homeland Security - the federal department that administers all matters relating to homeland security
Department of Homeland Security

executive department - a federal department in the executive branch of the government of the United States
. Why expend energy chastising people for inept language?

The problem is not just clumsy language. It's a lack of respect for the thousands who died that day. I was there, and I watched some of those people die. I heard the whine of a jet above me and watched it fly into a skyscraper. I watched people hurl themselves out of one of the tallest buildings in the world These are lists of skyscrapers, ranked by:
  • structural height (vertical elevation from the base to the highest architectural or integral structural element of the building).
. I stepped over body parts on West Street as I ran from the falling south tower.

Maybe it is because I watched it all happen that I can't refer to that day as "Nine Eleven" or "Nine One One," and that my jaw clenches clenches

the turned down portions of the nails used to keep horseshoes in place. Where the nails come out of the hoof wall they are twisted off and turned down as clenches to prevent the nails from working out. Called also clinches.
 when I hear these shortcuts See Win Shortcuts. . "Nine One One" is a nimble reference because it is the number we dial in an emergency. "Nine Eleven" sounds like "Seven Eleven," the ubiquitous convenience store. These references have the unintentional effect of cutesifying the attacks, and making it seem as if September 11 is for sale.

It is the same as shortening the titles of movie sequels (Men in Black II to MIIB MIIB Men in Black II (movie)
MIIB Major Incident Investigation Board (UK) 
, Dr. Doolittle II to DR2) or creating clever nicknames for consumer goods consumer goods

Any tangible commodity purchased by households to satisfy their wants and needs. Consumer goods may be durable or nondurable. Durable goods (e.g., autos, furniture, and appliances) have a significant life span, often defined as three years or more, and
. (Miller Genuine Draft is MGD mgd
abbr.
million gallons per day
, McDonald's is Mickey D's, Howard Johnson's is HoJo's, Federal Express actually changed its name to FedEx.) But what is the real point of saying "Nine Eleven" or writing "9/11"? Is saving the amount of energy it takes to breathe two or three more syllables (from six in "September Eleventh" to four in "Nine Eleven" or three in "Nine One One") so important? Is saving that extra space on a page worth it?

The United States thrives on speed and efficiency. We drive-through for anything (burgers, doughnuts, banks, coffee, weddings), we eat lunch at our desks, we flock to strip malls. Our desire for strength and size and speed is often cited as the reason we were targeted for attack in the first place. One might argue referring to September 11 in a shortened form comes naturally to Americans, and so inadvertently says: You can't change us.

But that argument does not change the way we should show respect for life, and a reverence for the darkness of that day. If history is going to refer to the attacks of September 11 by the calendar date alone, then we should do that rather than submit to our collective laziness. We should allow our children and theirs to inherit a reference to September 11 that honors those who died, instead of an expression that reflects our appetite for convenience.

Tim Townsend, a former Wall Street Journal reporter, is a student at Yale Divinity School The main mission of Yale College at its founding in 1701 was religious training. In its charter, it was designed as a school "wherein Youth may be instructed in the Arts & Sciences who through the blessing of Almighty God may be fitted for Publick employment both in Church & Civil State. .
COPYRIGHT 2002 Commonweal Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Townsend, Tim
Publication:Commonweal
Date:Sep 13, 2002
Words:781
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