davywavy: (Default)
davywavy ([personal profile] davywavy) wrote2004-03-30 03:52 pm

For once, the Daily Mirror gets it right...

Stolen from [livejournal.com profile] ias, who stole it from the Mirror...

"Do yourself and favour and speak like a Brit"

It has been a truism for decades: "Britain and America are two countries separated by the same language."

Not any more, they aren't.

Widely attributed to George Bernard Shaw, these words were spoken half a century ago - and if the great playwright were around today, might he feel a little nostalgic for that transatlantic rift? Because from cinema to TV, from the internet to our McDonald's, Starbucks and Gap-linedhigh streets, the influence of the US is everywhere.
Now, say the critics, the colonialism is complete with the natives - us - speaking the language of the empire - them.

Here are some of the worst culprits worth guarding against. As the French say: "Vive la difference!"

CLOSURE
There was a time when this was what happened after last orders at the Crown and Ferret. Now we're talking the pop psychology of Oprah Winfrey. "Closure" may be more succinct than: "I have finally reconciled myself to my parents' divorce, which for years impeded my psychological development", but who needs it when the old British way - lifelong bitterness - was so much more satisfying?

ISSUES
Once teenagers had spots and dodgy hairstyles; today they have "issues". Favourites include minor parental neglect, being denied the latest pair of trainers and the way Mum is so embarrassing in front of friends. Next time you hear some Avril Lavigne-alike airing her "issues" at the mall (or Tesco's car park), just stop her and say: "Real issues are Iraq or the environment. You haven't got issues, you've got acne."

24/7
When people say they've been working 24/7 all week, they haven't really stayed up for 168 hours without a wink of sleep. If "open all hours" was good enough for Ronnie Barker...

COULD CARE LESS
Like "bad" for "good", this expression actually means the exact opposite - that you couldn't care less. If the trend continues, just think where we'll all end up - black will mean white, yes will mean no and Bush will mean "compassionate, intellectual, pacifist statesman". Next week: Is stupid the new clever?

APARTMENT
It's the same size as a flat, it looks like a flat, yet by calling it an apartment, estate agents can charge you an extra £50,000.
All you get extra is the misguided belief that people called Ross and Rachel will drop by for brunch.
Face it: you're renting a one-bed flat over the chippie, and nobody's coming round except for the rent.

REGULAR
Fast-food speak, like fast food itself, threatens our well-being.
Americans like to call normal things "regular" - eg, a regular Coke with fries. But it's no longer just in restaurants that "regular" is replacing "standard". Now people come from "a regular family" or are described as a "regular guy". Regular means customary, or at spaced intervals, or symmetrical. None of which is the same as a pint-and-a-half bucket of bad coffee or a very dull bloke in the pub.

WHATEVER
Alicia Silverstone changed the English language when she dismissed her less stylishly attired preppies by saying "whatever" in the 1995 comedy Clueless. This infuriating phrase is pronounced "whut...evah" and often accompanied by an irritating eye-rolling and sullen jutting of the speaker's half-open jaw. Jane Austen, whose literary classic Emma was the inspiration for Clueless, must be revolving in her grave.

GARBAGE
Garbage are an American band led by Scots singer Shirley Manson. Britain's binmen have always and will always collect rubbish. Likewise, trash-can - the proper term is wastepaper basket or bin. Watch out for Garbage Laden, public enemy No 1.

AWESOME
If only we could go back to saying things were "nice" or "pleasant". But humbly positive expressions such as "super", "great" and "lovely" have been overwhelmed by super-superlatives. Now everything is "awesome" or "totally fabulous". Can't Gordon Brown do something to keep this rampant "praise inflation" in check?

I'M, LIKE, SOOOO COOL!
As in: "I'm, like, totally stoked that Dawson's Creek is about to start." Like Paris Hilton, overuse of "like" wastes our time and serves no purpose. Likewise, stretching out "so" is lazy and shows extreme poverty of vocabulary. Why not try out a proper sentence such as: "He was exceptionally cool." Assuming he was of a low temperature, that is.

CAN I GET...?
When Jennifer Aniston says it in Friends, she really means: "May I have..." An example of the States' grab-and-go coffee-bar culture which sounds outrageously silly over here. The correct response from cafe staff to the question: "Can I get a coffee?" should, of course, be: "No you can't get it. You see, I work here, so that's my job."

SPORTS
For some reason, Americans have taken the collective noun "sport", meaning sporting activities, and added a wholly unnecessary "s". Which is almost as annoying as the word "fruits". The term "sports" belongs strictly to sports' day, not sports reporter or sports pages, which should both be singular.

FRIES
Not content with forcing the Big Mac on us, the McDonald's marketing machine has introduced this verbal takeaway monstrosity to our shores. Note to US corporations: over here, we eat chips. No, that's not a chip. That's a crisp.

[identity profile] sobrique.livejournal.com 2004-03-30 07:01 am (UTC)(link)
Well said.

And whilst we're at it, how about we start banning anyone using 'txt spk'. Or those who feel the need to write a diatribe in all one paragraph.

[identity profile] davywavy.livejournal.com 2004-03-30 07:04 am (UTC)(link)
DTH 2 TH TXTRS!

Oh, and people who only write in CAPS get my goat too.

[identity profile] robinbloke.livejournal.com 2004-03-30 07:07 am (UTC)(link)
Add L33T to this list as well.

*pouts*

[identity profile] ksirafai.livejournal.com 2004-03-30 07:22 am (UTC)(link)
Mais avec cette phrase la, vous avez decide que vous aviez le droit de declarer que je suis passe quatre annees de ma vie en etudiant un sujet inutile...

(and 'scuse the manque d'accents... I blame LJ. :) )

Re: *pouts*

[identity profile] karohemd.livejournal.com 2004-03-30 09:11 am (UTC)(link)
HTML entities for accented characters:
&letter+grave/acute/circ;, e.g. è gives you è, ô gives you ô etc.

And I'm bound to have screwed somewhere along the lines as I'd had to use entities to write those entities so you can actually see the code...

Re: *pouts*

[identity profile] karohemd.livejournal.com 2004-03-30 09:11 am (UTC)(link)
Wahey, it worked!

[identity profile] jonnyargles.livejournal.com 2004-03-30 07:07 am (UTC)(link)
CAN I GET...?
When Jennifer Aniston says it in Friends, she really means: "May I have..."


Depending on the series, Ms Aniston may actually be one of the above mentioned cafe staff. This was before her career path took her to Bloomingdales and then, rather improbably, Ralph Lauren.

[identity profile] petal1983.livejournal.com 2004-04-01 07:34 am (UTC)(link)
Isnt "Can i get" followed by "you anything?"?

[identity profile] davywavy.livejournal.com 2004-04-01 07:52 am (UTC)(link)
No, as in (To shop assistant): "Can I get a coffee to go?"

Whatever the colonial pollution of the homeland...

[identity profile] applez.livejournal.com 2004-03-30 08:28 am (UTC)(link)
There is a considerable reactive response ... and not just in overt 'colonial' popularity of 'native' media like the BBC, The Office, Weakest Link, and particular 'native' stars like Sean Connery. There is considerable secretive influences as well, for example, there is a shockingly high degree of British English nomenclature and sentence structure used in such hit 'US' shows as Ally McBeal.

All one has to do is better organise the cultural war effort and work the Canadian connection to get properly-written texts to schools and TV studios.

It can work, just act measuredly and cleverly.
(deleted comment)

Re: Sign up for the George Bush linguistic lobotomy...

[identity profile] davywavy.livejournal.com 2004-03-31 03:28 am (UTC)(link)
WHAT?!?!

Good God.

That's...left me speechless. I mean, English lit, okay, at least the US has produced upwards of half-a-dozen books in the last few hundred years (and nearly twice that number of people actually able to read them), but language? I'm truly, truly appalled.

I actually have a feeling of internal distress right now, much as a Frenchman hearing 'le Weekend' might feel.

[identity profile] petal1983.livejournal.com 2004-04-01 07:38 am (UTC)(link)
FFs ok so americanisms piss me off as much as the next person, but did u know "fall" (as in autumn) is actually an old-english word, whereas our equivilent was "stolen" from latinate languages?? looks like the yanks got it right there!

also, yes american spellings are annoying, but dont u think they make slightly more sense sometimes?
*goes to wash out mouth with soap and water*

and if people are gonna be so pedantic, maybe we should have an "academie anglais"? the french are so good at things etc....

[identity profile] davywavy.livejournal.com 2004-04-01 07:59 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, but to Jingoistic Xenophones like the Daily Mail, the New world cannot do anything right.