Text VIII, for questions from 44 through 47.
Hangman, Spare That Word: The English
Purge Their Language
1 For feminists examining muliebrity (the condition of
being a woman), or soothsayers putting out their latest
vaticination (prophecy), the available lexicon may soon get
4 slimmer. The lexicographers behind Britain's Collins English
Dictionary have decided to exuviate (shed) rarely used and
archaic words as part of an abstergent (cleansing) process to
7 make room for up to 2,000 new entries. "We want the
dictionary to be a reflection of English as it is currently
spoken," says Ian Brookes, managing editor of Collins, "rather
10 than a fossilized version of the language."
Good luck with that. Here in Old Blighty, the
birthplace of English, the dictionary's compilers face
13 passionate resistance from language lovers who believe that
any cull reduces the richness and variety that make language
powerful — and leaves us all a bit dumber. "Newspapers are
16 often accused of setting their reading level for 12-year-olds,"
one opponent wrote on an online message board.
Collins' editors know that old words die hard — and
19 that some people will regard with contempt any execution
without a fair trial. So they've offered the chance of a reprieve.
They have made public 24 words that face deletion because
22 editors could find no example of their use in their database of
English-language books, newspapers, broadcasts and other
media. If, by February 2009, a word reappears in that
25 database with at least six "high quality" citations, it could be
spared from the semantic dustbin. "We're looking to see if
dropping a little stone in the pond of language actually does
28 generate ripples," says Brookes.
A number of public figures in Britain have stepped
forward to champion specific words, hoping to demonstrate
31 they are compossible (possible in coexistence) with everyday
speech. Andrew Motion, Britain's poet laureate since 1999,
selected skirr, which refers to the rattling, scratchy noise that
34 a bird's wings make during flight. "It's an appealing word with
an onomatopoeic value and resonance," he said. Motion, an
avid bird watcher, has already used the word on an evening
37 radio program and hopes to include it in a poem if he can do
so without "wrenching things around too much."
But reaction to the potential axing of words has
40 revealed specialized meanings that seem to have escaped
the dictionary's compilers. David Pybus, a perfumer in
London, says agrestic's alternate meaning should qualify it for
43 preservation: "It is used," he says, "in the perfume and flavor
industry quite extensively to describe an aroma note or type
which is 'of the countryside,' such as hay, heather, forest
46 depths or meadow." Who knew? Elsewhere, fantasy-game
devotees have rushed to the defense of periapt (a charm or
amulet), which they know from the popular Dungeons &
49 Dragons game, and geologists have pointed out the utility of
griseous (streaked or mixed with gray) in describing rocks and
minerals. Apparently, one man's linguistic recrement (waste,
52 refuse) is another man's treasure.
William Lee Adams. Internet: <http://www.time.com> (adapted).
Based on the last two paragraphs, choose the correct alternative.