Posted on 11/16/2019 6:32:42 AM PST by Moonman62
It's totally fine to use 'decimate' as a synonym for 'devastate'. This is why.
The issue that many people have with the decline and fall of the word decimate is that is once upon a time it had a very singular meaning, a meaning that is in danger of being lost forever to the vandals and barbarian hordes who are manhandling the English language through using this word to mean to destroy a large number of. The specific complaint is that decimate had the specific meaning, in ancient Rome, of killing one of every ten soldiers, as a form of military punishment. There are, it must be said, some problems with the argument that this is the only correct meaning today.
The first problem is that even if decimate did refer to the practice of killing one of every ten soldiers in Roman times, it did so in the service of Latin, not English. We have many words in English that are descended from Latin but which have changed their meaning in their travels. We no longer think of sinister as meaning on the left side, even though that was one of the words meanings when it existed in Latin.
Another problem with insisting that decimate should have but a single meaning is that very few words in English retain but a single meaning. An enormous percentage of the items in our vocabulary are capable of semantic multitasking. When a person uses a tricky word such as when, a, person, use, tricky, or word, all of which have multiple meanings, we use context to understand the speakers intent.
(Excerpt) Read more at merriam-webster.com ...
More than one spouse is spice...
Until the likely civil war.
The enormous flaw in that argument is that words are meant to communicate specific meanings. While a word may convey many concepts, as you say, the meanings will be different for others who maintain a different "concept" of the word. That leads to linguistic chaos. While language and word meanings do change over time, the essential factor is that a majority must agree on meanings or language becomes useless as a means of communicating ideas.
That's actually very appropriate today.
I cannot agree with you. Which of the 430 meanings of the word set listed in the Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary is the correct one?
LOL...Very good!
Meanings of words change. No one thinks of “ten” when they say “decimate.”
I couldn’t agree more but I suspect that we’re both peeing into the breeze. The price of sloppy usage is imprecision - if we actually were going to try to communicate pulling every tenth soldier out of the ranks and snuffing him, we’d have to use other words. That we’re unlikely to have to do that except in historical discourse is some comfort if you happen to be a soldier, I suppose. I want a word that describes killing nine out of ten politicians. Because the way things are going, we may need one.
The Left wants Newspeak. If people do not have the vocabulary, perhaps their thought can be controlled as well.
I've got a cure for Leftism using 1984 as a guide, but they won't like it...
Aren’t there biblical references to the left side bad and the right side good?
“Arent there biblical references to the left side bad and the right side good?”
At least one.
Not all of those meanings could have arisen at the same time. So I cant buy your idea that meanings cant change or its chaos. Thats one of the beauties of the English language. It can be vague or precise of something in between.
"While language and word meanings do change over time, the essential factor is that a majority must agree on meanings or language becomes useless as a means of communicating ideas."
I don't want to live in a Humpty-Dumpty world where, as he said, "When I use a word,it means just what I choose it to mean neither more nor less."
Virtually.
Literally. ...more words to abuse.
I see. My mistake. Still, theres always the case when a word or phrase is used in a new way for the first time. Shakespeare was famous for that.
OMG. This is one of my husbands greatest pet peeves.
In his case, it seems to be mostly because of his affection for Roman history, so he is all too aware of what it was supposed to mean.
Oh, DONT get me going!
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