The second quote is from
a book written by a linguist; it focuses on the
relationship between language change and language decay:
In brief, the puristic attitude towards language –
the idea that there is
an absolute standard of correctness that should be maintained – has its
origin in
a natural nostalgic tendency, supplemented and intensified by
social pressures. It is illogical, and impossible
to pin down to any firm
base. Purists behave as if there was a vintage year when language
achieved a measure of excellence which we should all strive to maintain.
In fact, there never was such a year. The language of Chaucer’s or
Shakespeare’s time was no better or no worse than that of our own –
just different.
Jean Aitchison,
Language Change: Progress or Decay (1991)
Traditionally within linguistics, people like
Simon have been labeled as
prescriptivists
because their goal is to prescribe usage: identify so-called
correct and incorrect
instances of language usage, and in essence tell peo-
ple how they should speak and write. Aitchison,
in contrast, is a
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: