New Words, Old Words

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Not so long ago, I wrote this. To summarise, it was about new words adopted into the English language by the Merriam-Webster dictionary, most of which had their genesis in online culture. So it was with great joy that I came across this article which outlines some of the words that the internet has succesfully killed. It's a lovely piece of work, I suggest you read it. My very favourite is at the top of the list - "friend". Once a word meaning " someone you knew, had a personal relationship with, occasionally spoke to, and frequently drank beers with" it now, according to the article, means "someone who found your email address and typed it into Facebook and/or LinkedIN. You may have met said person at a conference once, and possibly even conversed with for 5 or more minutes". Of course, my second favourite is in there too - "startup". Once, it meant "a company with a novel idea, service, product, or technology, and a vision on how to build that company into a successful, profitable entity". Now, it means "a college graduate and three friends who have an incremental idea, service, product, or technology, and a vision on how to build that company such that it gets acquired by Google, Microsoft, or Yahoo (in that order), preferably within 18 months for at least 9 figures."

The article is tongue-in-cheek - and readily admits it - but there's a whole lot of truth in there (albeit disguised nicely behind humour). Language is evolving, and the major vehicle for change is that thing that has become so pervasive in our lives - the internet - and the culture that goes with it. Not only have new words entered - "w00t" and "mondegreen" instantly spring to mind - but 'old' words have had their meanings modified to fit the new medium. I maintain that it's not a bad thing, it's progress (whatever definition you choose to use for 'progress'). Sometimes it seems like backwards progress, but it is nevertheless the direction we are heading. Don't like it? That's OK - the new generation do. And when they're all grown up and complaining about the "young 'ens", well, that's OK too. Their kids will be busy picking up the slack by then.

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