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Seven - Words

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2020

Bernard Crick
Affiliation:
Birkbeck College
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Summary

Against Promiscuity

‘Words, words, words’, answered the Lord Hamlet. ‘The ball seemed in the net, Montgomery1 lifted himself off the ground, somehow he got his fingers to it, a miracle, deflected it off the cross-bar; he was there by some supernatural instinct. Words fail me to describe the scene…!!’ No they blooming well didn’t, or if so, then only for the briefest moment. He was just getting his breath back. Then out flowed the words again. Never at a loss for words, but sometimes perhaps homo sapiens, ludens, the Fallen Angel or the Naked Ape is at a loss for the right words.

So I am not so sanguine (which is a lovely word to look up in the full Oxford English Dictionary) as Marghanita Laski said she was about the coinage of new words. Yes, indeed, it is one of the glories of our double-rooted English language that with it we can so readily make new words and extend the meanings of others. But they had better be good ones. Since we haven't got a French or a Hebrew Academy trying to steer the language, rather as governments try to steer the economy, and since even Sir Ernest Gowers in his great book, Plain Words, was just a little bit up-tight, then it is up to all of us who love the language to be a little sceptical, conservative or preservationist about the coiners and developers. I am wide open to be convinced, but I hate promiscuity with words.

Take just two innocent sounding extensions like ‘extremist’ and ‘dialogue’.

How often is the concept ‘religious extremist’ used when what is really meant is ‘fanatic’ or ‘zealot’, both good old words, someone extreme in his claims or action, but not necessarily the extreme point of a common tendency of the religious. He may be a logical reducio ad absurdsam of orthodoxy or he may be plain idiosyncratic. But with the common phrase ‘student extremist’ the tar-brush of extended meaning is often deliberate. In any precise sense ‘studentextremist’ usually refers to either Revolutionary Socialists or to anarchists: but the phrase carries the naughty implication that the extremist exemplifies what is latent in all students—I mean that they are an extrapolation from a rising curve of homogenous student response.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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  • Words
  • Bernard Crick, Birkbeck College
  • Book: Essays on Politics and Literature
  • Online publication: 24 September 2020
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  • Words
  • Bernard Crick, Birkbeck College
  • Book: Essays on Politics and Literature
  • Online publication: 24 September 2020
Available formats
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To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Words
  • Bernard Crick, Birkbeck College
  • Book: Essays on Politics and Literature
  • Online publication: 24 September 2020
Available formats
×