Terralthra wrote:The first English prescriptivist movement in the late 1650s which standardized grammar (largely based on Latinate grammar, thus the rules against splitting an infinitive, for example) (Robert Lowth). Spellings were first standardized in the mid-1760s by various prescriptivist dictionaries (Samuel Johnson); before then, there was no standard spelling at all.
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Right. Because a single monarchy of a few million mostly illiterate subjects standardizing a previously unstandardized language is the same scale as a dozen or so nation states representing four hundred million mostly literate citizens massively revamping an existing standard.
To say we couldn't restandardize spelling when until 250 years ago or so, it wasn't standardized at all is facile thinking, at best.
Sure, if we ignore the fact that there was, by definition, no previously entrenched standard to replace, and we also ignore that this time around, a billion people would have to re-learn how to read their own language.
Spelling restandardization in early 1900s.
You mean that movement I mentioned in an earlier post? The one which mostly failed to achieve its own modest goals, despite being championed by no less than Teddy Roosevelt?
The (incredibly successful) move to mark "ain't" as not being a word, despite a long history of usage.
Even if I'm generous enough to call "unorganized academic snobbery" "top down", this is: 1) a movement to
prevent change, not implement it, and 2) "ain't" is one word; you're advocating changing
hundreds of thousands. How is five orders of magnitude the same scale?
The political correctness in language movement.
How is this even analogous? Political correctness runs the gamut from pride-saving absurdities like "sanitation engineer" for "garbageman" to replacing gendered terms like "fireman" with gender-neutral ones like "firefighter" to minority groups adopting new names for themselves to it becoming taboo to drop the n-word in casual conversation. It's not top-down, it's not a single movement (let alone a coherent one), and it has resulted in words getting changed on a case-by-case basis, not the entire structure of some component of the language being systematically altered.
Should I keep going?
As you have yet to provide a relevant example, feel free. While you're at it, perhaps you could get around to addressing any of the
other serious practical difficulties I mentioned two posts ago.
Seems like a false cause to me. People use English because half the world was under British hegemony, which used English, and after that, a huge portion of trade went through the United States, also using English. Learning and using English was largely a matter of necessity, not any inherent functionality of the phonetic system.
Thanks for the history lesson. You completely missed the point, but I'm always happy to be told something I already know.
The fact people use English by necessity is irrelevant to my point. If there was no necessity,
no language would become a
de facto international language. The point is that despite a spelling system you claim is impossibly broken, a billion people have learned the language to one degree or another, and international commerce--as well as diplomacy, science, and aviation--is conducted in English at a scale previously unseen in human history. As I said in my first post, regardless of how "broken" you think English spelling is, it's obviously not broken enough to seriously hinder international communication--and here's a hint: if it was, the people screaming loudest for spelling reform wouldn't be linguistics nerds, it would be businessmen, diplomats, scientists, and air traffic controllers.
Also, please do not confuse the language with the phonetic system.
Way to split that hair. As if the phonetic system isn't a vital component of he written form of the language, and as if, after an entire post spent talking exclusively about how English is spelled, I'm suddenly talking about English as a whole.
Also, please stop dressing up your nitpicking as polite requests. It reeks of arrogance and it's irritating.
Also, for those ESL speakers, according to my phonology texts, some 40% of them list mistakes in ascertaining or remembering how to pronounce a written word or how to spell a heard word as their greatest difficulty in learning the language.
And fixing this justifies the disruption for native English speakers and the staggering expense for everybody entailed by restandardizing how? I asked for a cost-benefit analysis in my last post, and you haven't even tried to produce one. In fact, just as you have with the political problems involved in reform, you haven't even acknowledged they exist.
Maybe you wouldn't find as much resistance to restandardizing spelling as you seem to think?
Bluntly, you're on another planet if you think first-language speakers would accept restandardizing. Since standardization, spelling reform has been a dismal failure every time it's been attempted. There is no body with the legitimacy to impose such a reform in any English-speaking country, no legal mechanism to enforce reforms, no conceivable way to get the United States to go along with everybody else (or vice-versa), a centuries-long history of popular resistance to spelling reform from the people who actually have to use the language, and even if you
could overcome all these obstacles, the taxpayers would have a stroke when they saw the bill. I made all these points in my last post and you ignored them; I look forward to your actually addressing them this time around, or conceding the debate.