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Dark567 wrote:"Hey, I created a perpetual motion device"
"yeah, but your poster sucks. F-"

meatyochre wrote: Already there's an informal movement to make "their" a genderless singular pronoun.
Cecily wrote:The (British) Queen's English Society is to set up an Academy of English to advise on usage in a way that minimises change.
Cecily wrote:Don't get me started on that! The short version is that singular their/they is NOT grammatically incorrect. The "rule" was invented by Anne Fisher, an 18th-century British schoolmistress who wrote a popular grammar book, but oddly, has a stronger hold on AmE than BrE. Chaucer, Austen, Byron, Thackeray, Eliot, Trollope, Dickens and many others have used it routinely. If “you” can be singular or plural, why the objections to “they”? It's not a feminist point about gender-neutral language but a practical acceptance of history and the fact it is useful, widely used and unambiguous.
Cecily wrote:meatyochre wrote: Already there's an informal movement to make "their" a genderless singular pronoun.
Don't get me started on that! The short version is that singular their/they is NOT grammatically incorrect. The "rule" was invented by Anne Fisher, an 18th-century British schoolmistress who wrote a popular grammar book, but oddly, has a stronger hold on AmE than BrE. Chaucer, Austen, Byron, Thackeray, Eliot, Trollope, Dickens and many others have used it routinely. If “you” can be singular or plural, why the objections to “they”? It's not a feminist point about gender-neutral language but a practical acceptance of history and the fact it is useful, widely used and unambiguous.
Debates such as that are exactly why I think an academy is pointless and doomed to fail. It would be especially hard to apply to English because it is such an international language that already has so many variants.
Dark567 wrote:"Hey, I created a perpetual motion device"
"yeah, but your poster sucks. F-"

Cecily wrote:The (British) Queen's English Society is to set up an Academy of English to advise on usage in a way that minimises change.
goofy wrote: Give them an academy if they want, and let them make decrees on whatever areas of usage bother them. It won't make any difference.
Cecily wrote:It's not a feminist point about gender-neutral language but a practical acceptance of history and the fact it is useful, widely used and unambiguous.
Velifer wrote: Something could be accepted in the past, fall out of favor, and be re-instituted for very different reasons.
this isn't my cowMighty Jalapeno wrote:I feel like you're probably an ocelot, and I feel like I want to eat you. Feeling is fun!
Cecily wrote:And can anyone explain this observation about "sanction"?
"Portmanteau words are words that "wrap up" two or more meanings in a single word so that, when they are used, it is not clear which of those meanings is intended. They should be replaced by separate words for each meaning. "Sanction" is one such word."
(http://queens-english-society.com/errors.html)
goofy wrote: They're complaining that "sanction" has two opposite meanings. But they've completely misunderstood what a portmanteau word is.
Cecily wrote:Has anyone pressed for an American Academy of English, and would have any more chance of success than this British version? Noah Webster didn't achieve everything he wanted, but he was pretty successful at changing usage. I wonder why he succeeded, and also, how the transition worked.
goofy wrote:I think Webster influenced spelling because he was lucky enough to be publishing the most popular dictionary. It seems to me that most attempts to change language by decree don't succeed.
this isn't my cowMighty Jalapeno wrote:I feel like you're probably an ocelot, and I feel like I want to eat you. Feeling is fun!
Cecily wrote:Has anyone pressed for an American Academy of English?
Velifer wrote: We have one, but the membership standards are pretty low.
While many people welcome The Academy and agree with the QES that it is well overdue and that "something must be done" to "preserve" the language, others condemn the initiative, precisely by taking issue with the word "preserve". The detractors, quite rightly, decry any attempt to either "freeze" the language in its present form or to "police" it, that is to say to enforce a particular style of English among the general public.
Next we have the common curs. They maul and massacre the language at every twist and turn and they "ain't not going to 'ave no smart git tellin' 'em wot they've got to say".
this isn't my cowMighty Jalapeno wrote:I feel like you're probably an ocelot, and I feel like I want to eat you. Feeling is fun!
this isn't my cowMighty Jalapeno wrote:I feel like you're probably an ocelot, and I feel like I want to eat you. Feeling is fun!
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