the words, and over time they have become interchangeable – perhaps
flout will even become archaic and replaced by
flaunt. And this confusion
is not isolated. Because both
disinterested and
uninterested contain negative
prefixes (
dis- and
un-, respectively), many people
now view these words as
synonyms, even though many insist that the two words have distinct
meanings:
disinterested can mean only ‘impartial or unbiased’ and
uninter-
ested only ‘lacking interest.’ Thus, in a court of law, a defendant would
want a judge who is “disinterested,” not “uninterested.”
Some object to the use of
their in a sentence like
Everybody is trying their
hardest on the grounds
that the verb agreeing with Everybody is singular,
while the pronoun referring to
everybody,
their, is plural. However, the alter-
natives to
their (generic
his or
his or her) either exhibit gender bias or result
in a stylistically awkward construction. The pronoun
their does neither
and,
additionally, fills a gap in the language: it gives speakers of English a
singular third person gender-neutral pronoun without having to resort to
the creation of an entirely new pronoun. Some have proposed the word
ter
as a singular third person generic possessive pronoun. But adding a new
pronoun to a language is difficult because pronouns are a closed class, a
class that unlike nouns or verbs does not easily admit new members.
Therefore, singular
they, which
is already in the language, provides a sim-
ple solution to what has proven a difficult problem.
All of the so-called mistakes in this section illustrate the capability of
human languages to adapt and change in response to the needs of their
users in a manner that is consistent with the mechanisms of change
inherent in all languages. English may need, as described above, a new
gender-neutral pronoun, but because this
need cannot be easily accom-
modated, speakers have been forced to use an existent form –
they/their –
in a new way. And while this change is disruptive too, over time it is like-
ly to succeed, since language change and subsequent acceptance of new
forms is a slow, gradual process, proceeding
in fits and starts and, more
often than not, ultimately succeeding. But if a change does not succeed,
the entire process simply starts all over again.
44
INTRODUCING ENGLISH LINGUISTICS
Summary
In studying languages such as English and Mandarin, linguists have
developed two different ways of classifying languages and studying
their linguistic development over time.
The traditional method, the
genetic system of classification, involves grouping languages into lan-
guage families and constructing family trees. English, for instance, is a
member of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family.
As a Germanic language, English originated around AD 400 and went
through five successive stages, beginning
with Old English and culmi-
nating in Contemporary English, the language of the moment.
Linguists are also interested in studying not just
how languages
change but
why they change. While linguists disagree about whether
language change has an evolutionary basis, there is wider agreement
on other motivations for language change.