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Que Happenin'?
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Good morning, Jesse:
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It's no surprise to me that there are language issues in the news. In my
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experience, everybody--expert and amateur alike--has something to say about the
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state of the language.
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For example, today's Times has a story on the need to know Spanish if
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you live in New York (front page, above the fold)--can it be that Spanish is
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replacing French as the prestige second language? And Education Week
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reports today that the NAEP, the National Assessment of Educational Progress,
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is planning to test American schoolchildren on their knowledge of Spanish. The
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NAEP regularly tests reading, writing, and math, issuing national report cards
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on how our schools are doing in these subjects. The "1998 Writing Report Card,"
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which came out just last month, reported this scary news: The writing ability
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of half the American schoolchildren is below average! Anyway, the proposed test
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of Spanish will be the NAEP's first foreign-language test. Other minority
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languages are also in the news. Today's Arizona Republic reports on the
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first urban high-school class in the Navajo language, a move to stem the loss
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of Navajo among the young Native Americans who move to the city. Yesterday's
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New York Times carried an article on minority-language revival in
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Europe--particularly Breton in France (the head of the French Academy objects
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that this will only dilute the purity of French). And the San Francisco
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Chronicle reports that Whatshappenin.com is suing Quepasa.com for trademark
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infringement, arguing that "Que pasa?" has become so transparent that we all
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know it means "What's happenin'?" As a predictable response to this resurgence
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of interest in minority languages, today's Toledo Blade runs a letter
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urging that English become the official language of the country. As if a law
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could get people to alter their language.
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But back to your comments. Yesterday's New York Times ran another
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article on Lewinsky, and on political slang in general. And I know that you
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commented on Lewinsky in a recent New York Post story. Speaking of
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Lewinsky, I happened by sheer accident to be spacing out in front of the TV
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last night watching a rerun on the USA Network of Law & Order: Special
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Victims Unit , when I heard the Lewinsky reference that sparked the senior
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Lewinsky's lawsuit. I found it amusing that the writers of this new series
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chose a euphemism where elsewhere they have been much more blunt. (Of course,
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the series title, Special Victims Unit , is itself a euphemism: It refers
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to sex crimes, something that didn't occur to me till I saw the first episode.)
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Clearly they used "Lewinsky" for political shock value, and to draw attention
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to their new show--and why, I ask you, is a brand-new show already in reruns on
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a competing network? Anyway, I don't think "Lewinsky," as a verb or a noun, has
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the staying power of something like Heimlich, another eponym (word named after
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a person, for those who are reading over our shoulders) involving one person
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doing something physical to another. Of course, while a future episode of
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Special Victims Unit may choose to become more explicit about this
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maneuver, you won't see diagrams of how to perform a Lewinsky in restaurants
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all over the country.
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As for the Margalit Fox article you mention, I did read it and found it an
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interesting summary of what we might call "the linguist's dilemma": People want
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linguists to tell them how to be correct, but at the same time, they resist
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intervention, taking the attitude, "Who are you to tell me what to do?" It may
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seem like a no-win situation for us. But it's also possible to see this as a
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natural part of the linguistic give and take (or what a theorist might call the
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social construction of language).
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I missed the angry response letters to the Fox essay. Maybe they didn't
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print them in the Midwest edition of the Times , or maybe I was absent
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that day. But they don't surprise me. I get angry mail every time I try to
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point out people's inconsistent language attitudes. Last month I wrote an Op-Ed
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piece about Louisiana's new law requiring students to call their teachers "Sir"
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or "Ma'am." The Louisiana state representative who drafted the law said there
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was a similar requirement in the state's prisons, and he thought it worked so
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well he wanted to extend it to the schools. In my essay I pointed out that
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language is difficult to regulate: People just don't want to use language the
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way other people tell them to. I also observed that people used to want schools
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to be less like prisons, but that now the trend seems to be to make them more
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like prisons, adding language regulation to crowd control, uniforms, metal
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detectors, and locker searches. In response, I got an angry letter from a
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reader telling me I ought to be in prison for writing what I did.
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So I have come to realize, over a long career of such angry letters, that
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part of my job is to encourage people to look critically at language use, and
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part of my job is to get people angry.
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Dennis
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