So i was reading through some of the news sites i check daily and although this is very usless knowledge i was quite surprised to see that there are 1 billion words in the English language. You know, when i was in school trying to learn spanish i thought that was hard but can you imaging people trying to learn english with all of our weird slang and things like synonyms, etc. I bet it would be pretty hard.
Thank you! I remember one of my Jr. High English teachers (that's what Middle School was called back when I was in 7th grade) telling us that there were X-hundred-million words in English, but I don't remember the exact number. I'm so glad to now have a number to use!
And what a number it is!
But you know what's so sad? Even with a billion words at their disposal, many American teens (and adults, too) still can't find a substitutes for the words "like" and the f-word ("It's, like, so f'in cold outside"), or the increasingly ever-present "y'know".
It would be interesting to see how many of those billion words the average American teenager (and adult) uses in a typical day. I'm betting it would be less than 1,000. Sad, eh?
But you know what's so sad? Even with a billion words at their disposal, many American teens (and adults, too) still can't find a substitutes for the words "like" and the f-word ("It's, like, so f'in cold outside"), or the increasingly ever-present "y'know".
But if they keep saying y'know, soon we'll have 1 Billion and 1 words in the English language. Pretty soon we'll have more than anyone can know because people just keep making them up and Webster keeps going with the flow.
But if they keep saying y'know, soon we'll have 1 Billion and 1 words in the English language. Pretty soon we'll have more than anyone can know because people just keep making them up and Webster keeps going with the flow.
That is so true. Its like i am sure google is now a word. Not only a noun (for the website) but also a verb (just google it). So bizarre how in our language thinks stick and become apart of our everyday language. And you're right Webster just keeps adding them to the dictionary.
Or, being a border girl here...how two words can be spelled different in English, but in different countries...such as 'color' in the US and 'colour' in Canada. I get so used to seeing it the Canadian way, I just don't even think about it anymore. And I'm darn near living in a hoose instead of a house! I DO love my Canadian friends...
That is so true. Its like i am sure google is now a word. Not only a noun (for the website) but also a verb (just google it). So bizarre how in our language thinks stick and become apart of our everyday language. And you're right Webster just keeps adding them to the dictionary.
Main Entry: google1
Part of Speech: verb
Definition: to search for information about a specific person through the Google search engine
Example: She googled her high school boyfriends.
Etymology: trademark Google
Usage: googling n
Not to confuse the foreigners, but don't you find it weird that I before E except after C...and except in the word WEIRD???
I never got that word correct until someone who frequently got aggravated over its misspelling pointed out that weird is spelled weird. Now I never miss it.
I also have to agree that words are added rather willy-nilly. Seriously, ten years from now is anyone going to have a use for 'metrosexual'?
Of course, my personal favorite is still antidisestablishmentarianism, which one of my high school English teachers referred to as the longest word in the English language. It's not, but it's still pretty cool.
Here is a pretty good article on both the concept of what a word is and a person's vocabulary.
I'm always interested in expanding my vocabulary, but I seem to already have a fairly good one, if the quizzes in Reader's Digest are any indication. I still recalled my surprise when I discovered that 'machiavellian' is not in the vocabulary of most high schoolers. I suppose that says something of the sort of person I befriended as a teenager, eh?
I hope they (whoever is in charge of such things) weed out words as they fall into disuse. Perhaps they can have a Word Hall of Fame for goofy words that were once all the rage but eventually fell out of favor.
I also wonder what they're going to do with all the "leet speak" words that really don't have any verbal counterparts.
At the rate the language is evolving, I'll bet we hit 2 billion soon! I just hope good grammar doesn't go extinct in the process!
I just hope good grammar doesn't go extinct in the process!
I fear that it already has. Grammar and its twin sister, proper spelling, are on their last legs. Seriously, how often have you seen a product in the store proudly proclaiming 20% LESS CALORIES THAN BEFORE? (It should be "fewer" calories, for those scratching their heads.)
I am constantly correcting my husband's grammar (we have an agreement that I can do that if I leave his spelling alone). It's frustrating as a parent, because I am trying to teach my daughters proper grammar. I love my mother-in-law, but she came very close to a painful demise when she constantly used the term "feets" to my eldest a couple of years ago. Feets!