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The
Martha's Vineyard Times is a weekly publication.
July 21 - July 27, 2005 Edition
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Large
Word magic
July 21, 2005
By
Doug Cabral
Among
their many attributes, words are useful, playful, sometimes hurtful,
even mysterious. Most have stories birth, youth, middle age,
transitions, old age, even (horrors) what the popular sociologists
call passages. Good words go bad. Bad words are redeemed. New words
come to life. Old, disused words are revivified and set to work in
unfamiliar circumstances, in which they quickly make places for themselves.
Some of these changes add meanings, some put longtime, familiar meanings
out of bounds, under pressure from current culture.
Dictionaries keep track of all this, but they are slow.
Words are lively and protean, dictionary editors are less so, and
often they resist the changes that common usage insists upon, until
resistance is futile and giving in is the only choice remaining. Still,
stubborn unwillingness to accept change can have its rewards (yippee).
Many a dictionary editor has lived on after succumbing to a change
only to realize a satisfying I-told-you-so moment when a word the
editor never wanted to add to the lexicon in the first place flames
out after a brief (I mean dictionary time, which is measured by the
hundreds of years) moment in vogue.
For example, remember daddy-o, created by an early form of cosmetic
surgery performed on the familiar and loving patronymic we all know
and adore. Thanks to the beat generation it acquired a kind of double
agents life. On the one hand, it could be used to mean the sort
of man now known as a cool dude, maybe a musician. On the other, it
could ridicule an older guy, father or not, who just plain missed
the point, and did so repeatedly. Apparently, this latter meaning
has been supplanted, at least by my children, by the hyphenated mutation
duff-man, built on the root duffer. If you wonder how a word can be
used alternatively in complimentary and derogatory senses, youre
going to ask some cool cat, er, dude. It escapes me.
Anyway, whats the best way to track these changes so that you
are always on firm ground word-wise? The question arises because of
an e-mail from Aushra Galley of Edgartown, who wrote to take amiable
issue with a word discussed in this space last week.
After reading Mr. Cabrals At Large column
entitled Watch It, Ms. Galley wrote, I decided
to head for my dictionary (Random House Websters College Dictionary,
2000 Second Revised Edition) to check on a hunch and sure enough,
the definition given for disfranchise is to disenfranchise,
a word which, according to Mr. Cabral, does not exist in the English
language. Now Im really confused. Please advise.
Happy to advise, but first, a quibble. I did not write that disenfranchise
does not exist. It does, as Ms. Galley correctly reminds us. What
I said was disenfranchise is not a word welcomed in The Times letters
columns.
I think Ms. Galley raises an issue that has to do with what dictionary
one chooses to use a common dilemma. Dictionaries have different
personalities. Some are more agreeable than others, more accepting,
more inclusive. Some are stricter, more old-fashioned. Ms. Galley,
quite reasonably, referred to the Random House Websters College
Dictionary, an excellent choice, but in the view of some perhaps a
little lenient, go with the flow, if it feels good, fine. And that
can lead to trouble.
Now, you can spend a lot of time trying to decide which dictionary
is easy going, which is a taskmaster, but heres a simple test.
Measure them. What you are looking for is the thickest dictionary
you can find. And, no paperbacks, please. Your typical college dictionary
might measure, say, 2.75 inches, if youre lucky. Respectable,
but hardly the rock on which to build your lexicon. Now, something
like Websters Third New International Dictionary, theres
a dictionary with heft enough to be considered authoritative. Four
and a quarter inches of the very best. Its the next best thing
to the Oxford English Dictionary, 20 volumes, thats 40 inches
plus. If the key to getting the right word and knowing what it means
is how thick your dictionary is, and thats the standard were
advocating here, well its the OED hands down.
The OED and Websters Third, a combined 45 inches or more of
dictionary, unquestionably prefer disfranchisement, and so should
you.
There is an extra-dictionary test one can apply to such a competition
as that between disfranchise and disenfranchise. To find the best
word, unlike the best dictionary, you are often looking for the thinnest,
not the thickest. You dont want an OED-type word if you can
avoid it. You want a paperback-type word with the fewest syllables
that will do the job. By this measure, disfranchise is the clear winner,
just three syllables that carry the same meaning as disenfranchises
four. That en really adds nothing.
So, in dictionaries think thick; in words, thin. |
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