Mind your language and stop worrying about crowdsourced dictionaries

Definition of language

Words like ‘amazeballs’, ‘Facebook’, ‘totes’ and ‘frenemy’ are officially part of the English language.

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In July 2012 the Collins English Dictionary decided to “crowdsource” new words to the English Language by allowing the public to submit words (and definitions) they thought had become part of our everyday lexicon. Late yesterday, it released a list of approximately 80 words that would be added to its online dictionary.

What constitutes an English word or not has more been in the realm of scholars and professors (most notably from Oxford), but the move from Collins certainly shows how much the world has changed. For the first time real people, laymen, the ones who actually use the language, get to have a say in what is legitimate vernacular and what isn’t.

The move would be considered heretical for purists who like the idea that English should remain English and to allow colonials and foreigners to have a say would be downright unthinkable. Then there are those who would think that English should become a more refined language, harking back to the days of Shakespeare and thees and thous. It would be the same English people who forget that the queen herself is of German descent and that the official language of the aristocracy for years was French!

Crowdsourcing the English Language takes us to a whole new level of global integration. As companies and societies become more culturally homogenized it would make sense that language would adapt to allow for more rapid changes. Technology changes at an incredible pace and so too must the language. We can no longer wait for toffee-nosed stiff upper-lipped professors from Oxford to authorise a word for general use.

And that’s what makes the English language unique. It may not be the most widely spoken language (Spanish has that) or the majority of speakers (Mandarin), but it has the flexibility to grow and expand at a pace that is rapid enough to keep up with the advances of technology.

And who knows, maybe in 2013 we can add “cray cray” into our lexicon — it seems the whole world has gone there already.

Image: BigStock

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