Sunday, April 22, 2012

When commonly misused words become accepted practice

A recent change to the Associated Press Stylebook now permits the use of "hopefully" to indicate "I hope" in addition to its correct use as an adverb meaning "in a hopeful manner." The change occurred because the word is misused so often, most people treat "hopefully" as a verb anyway rather than as a modifier. This prompted the BBC News Magazine to consult with a number of language experts, including Grammar Girl's Mignon Fogarty and Black Law Dictionary's Bryan Garner, about other commonly misused words that have entered into accepted use and some that never should.

Are language cops losing war against 'wrongly' used words?

Begs the question This phrase is guaranteed to raise the ire of language purists. It describes a logical fallacy where one tries to prove a point by assuming the point is already valid: "Eating meat is immoral because meat is murder." But "to beg the question" is often used to mean "to raise the question", and that usage increasingly dominates, says Mignon Fogarty, author of the book Grammar Girl's Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing.

Fogarty set out to defend the traditional usage in her upcoming book, 101 Troublesome Words. "After scouring articles and blog posts and being unable to find it used in the traditional way I became convinced it was a lost cause," she says.

Bemused Bemused means puzzled or confused, but is often used to mean slightly amused or entertained. It's one of a class of words that the linguist Bryan Garner calls "skunked". Those who know the word's proper meaning are upset when they see it misused, those who don't know the proper meaning are confused when it's used correctly.

"A lot of editors will avoid it altogether," says Colleen Barry, a copyeditor for IDG Enterprise and creator of the @CopyCurmudgeon Twitter handle. Instead, editors and journalists will often find a way to edit out skunked words, which disappear from traditional publications. However, they can still live on in Tweets, blog posts and other unedited web content, where the meaning is less likely to adhere to traditional rules of style - and as a result, the "inaccurate" definition becomes more accepted.

Disinterested In the same way that interested once meant having a stake - interested parties, for example - disinterested meant having no bias or gain. If she's disinterested in the Olympics, she won't benefit financially from the games, or have a family member participate. "Interested" is rarely used in that form, which puts disinterested at risk.

"When the positive goes, you can't expect to keep the negative around," says Nunberg.

Now, disinterested is often used synonymously with "not interested".

"That's too bad, because there is an uninterested already which means the same thing," says Ben Yagoda, professor of English and journalism at the University of Delaware, and author of When You Catch an Adjective, Kill It. "Disinterested is kind of a cool word, there's no other word that means just that."

Nauseous Nauseous is the descriptor given to something that makes you feel sick, eg a nauseous odour. But people who are feeling unwell often say "I feel nauseous". Purists argue that they should say "nauseated". Many dictionaries and usage guides now list both definitions - and do so in response to the way people have continuously misspoke. "Dictionaries are about words as they're used, not as they think they should be used," says Barry.

Who/Whom Whom is on the way to becoming as archaic as "thou" or "thee", says John McIntyre, the night editor at the Baltimore Sun newspaper. It was his letter to the AP that prompted the change to "hopefully". "It's pretty much gone in spoken English and is increasingly abandoned in written English. You can see how precarious it is because when people use it, they often misuse," he says. "Increasingly it makes sense not to bother."

Click here to see how "anxious," "decimate" and "presently" have also changed meaning over time.

(jbl). 

https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/legal_skills/2012/04/when-commonly-misused-words-become-accepted-practice.html

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Comments

I purposely looked this up because I am tired of seeing the degradation of our language in my lifetime becoming so easily acceptable.

Posted by: Kelly Lozano | Sep 16, 2022 12:00:08 AM

Another skunked word is podium, which is supposed to mean a raised platform to stand on, but is often mis-used to refer to a lecturn.

Posted by: otto | Apr 24, 2012 2:10:18 PM

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