Txtng is killing language. JK John McWhorter

[Music]

[Music]

we always hear that texting is a scourge

the idea is that texting spells the

decline and fall of any kind of serious

literacy or at least writing ability

among young people in the United States

and now the whole world today the fact

of the matter is that it just isn’t true

and it’s easy to think that it is true

but in order to see it in another way in

order to see that actually texting is a

miraculous thing not just energetic but

a miraculous thing a kind of emergent

complexity that we’re seeing happening

right now we have to pull the camera

back for a bit and look at what language

really is in which case one thing that

we see is that texting is not writing at

all what do I mean by that basically if

we think about language language has

existed for perhaps a hundred and fifty

thousand years at least eighty thousand

years and what it arose as is speech

people talked that’s what we’re probably

genetically specified for that’s how we

use language most writing is something

that came along much later and as we saw

in the last talk there’s a little bit of

controversy as to exactly when that

happened but according to traditional

estimates if humanity had existed for 24

hours then writing only came along at

about 11:07 p.m. that’s how much of a

laterally thing writing is so first

their speech and then writing comes

along as a kind of artifice now don’t

get me wrong

writing has certain advantages when you

write because it’s a conscious process

because you can look backwards you can

do things with language that are much

less likely if you’re just talking for

example imagine a passage from Edward

Gibbons the decline and fall of the

Roman Empire the whole engagement lasted

above 12 hours till the gradual retreat

of the Persians was changed into a

disorderly flight of which the shameful

examples given by the principal leaders

in the serena’s himself that’s

but let’s face it nobody talks that way

or at least they shouldn’t if they’re

interested in reproducing that it’s not

the way any human being speaks casually

casual speech is something quite

different linguists have actually shown

that when we’re speaking casually in an

unmonitored way we tend to speak in word

packets of maybe seven to ten words

you’ll notice this if you ever have

occasion to record yourself or a group

of people talking that’s what speech is

likes speech is much looser it’s much

more telegraphic it’s much less

reflective very different from writing

so we naturally tend to think because we

see language written so often that

that’s what language is but actually

what language is is speech they’re two

things now of course as history has gone

by it’s been natural for there to be a

certain amount of bleed between speech

and writing so for example in a distant

era now it was common when one gave a

speech to basically talk like writing so

I mean the kind of speech that you see

someone giving in an old movie where

they clear their throat and they don’t

ladies and gentlemen and then they speak

in a certain way which has nothing to do

with casual speech it’s formal it uses

long sentences like this given one it’s

basically talking like you write and so

for example we’re thinking so much these

days about Lincoln because of the movie

the Gettysburg Address was not the main

meal of that event for two hours before

that Edward Everett spoke on a topic

that frankly cannot engage us today and

barely did then the point of it was to

listen to him speaking like writing

ordinary people stood and listened to

that for two hours it was perfectly

natural that’s what people did then

speaking like writing well if you can

speak like writing then logically it

follows that you might want to also

sometimes write like you speak the

problem was just that in the material

mechanical sense that was harder back in

the day for the simple reason that

materials don’t lend them so

to it it’s almost impossible to do that

with your hand except in shorthand and

then communication is limited on a

manual typewriter it was very difficult

and even when we had electric

typewriters or then computer keyboards

the fact is that even if you can type

easily enough to keep up with the pace

of speech more or less you have to have

somebody who can receive your message

quickly once you have things in your

pocket that can receive that message

then you have the conditions that allow

that we can write like we speak and

that’s where texting comes in and so

texting is very loose in its structure

no one thinks about capital letters or

punctuation when one text but then again

do you think about those things when you

talk No

and so therefore why would you when you

were texting what texting is despite the

fact that it involves the brute

mechanics of something that we call

writing is fingered speech that’s what

texting is now we can write the way we

talk and it’s a very interesting thing

but nevertheless easy to think that

still it represents some sort of decline

we see this general bagginess of the

structure the lack of concern with rules

in the way that we’re used to learning

on the blackboard and so we think that

something has gone wrong it’s a very

natural sense but the fact of the matter

is that what is going on is a kind of

emergent complexity that’s what we’re

seeing in this fingered speech in order

to understand it what we want to see is

the way in this new kind of language

there is new structure coming up and so

for example there is in texting a

convention which is lol now lol we

generally think of as meaning laughing

out loud

and of course theoretically it does and

if you look at older text than people

used it to actually indicate laughing

out loud but if you text now or if you

are someone who’s aware of the substrate

of texting the

it’s become you’ll notice that lol does

not mean laughing out loud anymore it’s

evolved into something that is much

subtler this is an actual text that was

done by a non male person of about 20

years old not too long ago

I love the font you’re using bTW Julie

Lal thanks gmail is being slow right now

have you think about it that’s not funny

no one’s laughing and yet there it is so

you assume there’s been some kind of

hiccup then Susan says lawl I know

again more guffawing than we’re used to

when you’re talking about these

inconveniences so Julie says I just sent

you an email Susan lul I see it very

funny people if that’s what lol means

this Julie says so what’s up Susan Lau I

have to write a 10-page paper she’s not

amused let’s think about it lul is being

used in a very particular way it’s a

marker of empathy it’s a marker of

accommodation we linguists call things

like that pragmatic particles any spoken

language that’s used by real people has

them if you happen to speak Japanese

think about that little word net that

you use at the end of a lot of sentences

if you listen to the way black youth

today speak think about the use of the

word yo hold dissertations could be

written about it and probably are being

written about it a pragmatic particle

that’s what Lal has gradually become

it’s a way of using the language between

actual people

another example is slash now we can use

slash in the way that we’re used to

along the lines of we’re going to have a

party slash networking session that’s

kind of like what we’re at slash is used

in a very different way in texting among

young people today it’s used to change

the scene so for example this Sally

person says so I need to find people to

chill with and Jake says haha you’d

write a dissertation about haha - but we

don’t have time for that

haha so you’re going by yourself why

Sally for this summer program at NYU

Jake haha / I’m watching this video with

sons players trying to shoot with one

eye the slash is interesting I don’t

really even know what Jake is talking

about after that

but you notice that he’s changing the

topic now that seems kind of mundane but

think about how in real life if we’re

having a conversation we want to change

the topic there ways of doing it

gracefully you don’t just zip right into

it you’ll pat your thighs and look

wistfully off into the distance or

you’ll say something like makes you

think when it really didn’t but what

you’re really what you’re really trying

to do is change the topic you can’t do

that while you’re texting and so ways or

developing of doing it within this

medium all spoken languages have what a

linguist calls a new information marker

or two or three texting has developed

one from this slash so we have a whole

battery of new constructions that are

developing and yet it’s easy to think

well something is still wrong there’s a

lack of structure of some sort it’s not

as sophisticated as the language of the

Wall Street Journal well the fact of the

matter is look at this person in 1956

and this is when texting doesn’t exist I

Love Lucy is still on the air many do

not know the alphabet or multiplication

table cannot write format we’ve heard

that sort of thing before

not just in 1956 1917 Connecticut

schoolteacher 1917 this is the time when

we all assumed that everything somehow

in terms of writing was perfect because

the people on Downton Abbey or

articulate or something like that so

from every college in the country goes

up the cry our freshmen can’t spell

can’t punctuate and so on you can go

even further back than this it’s the

president of Harvard its 1871 there’s no

electricity people have three names bad

spelling in correctness as well as in

elegance of expression in writing and

he’s talking about people who are

otherwise well prepared for college

studies you can go even further back

1841 some long-lost Superintendent of

Schools is upset because of what he has

for a long time noted with regret the

almost entire neglect of the original

blah blah blah blah or you can go all

the way back

with 63 ad and there’s this poor man who

doesn’t like the way people are speaking

Latin as it happens he was writing about

what had become French and so there are

always there are always people worrying

about these things and the planet

somehow seems to keep spinning and so

the way I’m thinking of texting these

days is that what we’re seeing is a

whole new way of writing that young

people are developing which they’re

using alongside their ordinary writing

skills and that means that they’re able

to do two things increasing evidence is

that being bilingual is cognitively

beneficial that’s also true of being by

dialectal that’s certainly true of being

by dialectal in terms of your writing

and so texting actually is evidence of a

balancing act that young people are

using today not consciously of course

but it’s an expansion of their

linguistic repertoire is very simple if

somebody from 1973 looked at what was on

a dormitory message board in 1993 the

slang would have changed a little bit

since the era of love story but they

would understand what was on that

message board take that person from 1993

not that long ago this is you know Bill

& Ted’s Excellent Adventure those people

take those people and they read a very

typical text written by a 20 year old

today often they would have no idea what

half of it meant because a whole new

language has developed among our young

people doing something as mundane as

what it looks like to us when they’re

batting around on their little devices

so in closing if I could go into the

future if I could go into 2033 first

thing I would ask is whether David Simon

had done a sequel to the wire I would

want to know and I really would ask that

and then I’d want to know actually what

was going on on Downton Abbey that’d be

the second thing and then the third

thing would be please show me a sheaf of

texts written by 16 year old girls

because I would want to know where this

language had developed

since our times and ideally I would then

send them back to you and me now so we

could examine this linguistic miracle

happening right under our noses thank

you very much

you

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我们总是听说发短信是一种祸害,

这个想法是发短信意味着美国乃至全世界年轻人

中任何一种严肃的

读写能力或至少是写作能力

的衰落和衰落。

问题的关键在于它不是真的

,很容易认为它是真的,

但是为了以另一种方式看待它,

以便看到实际上发短信是一件

神奇的事情,不仅精力充沛,而且

是一种神奇的事情

我们现在看到正在发生的紧急复杂性,

我们必须将相机拉

回来一点,看看到底

是什么语言,在这种情况下,

我们看到的一件事是发短信根本不是写

什么我的意思基本上是什么 如果

我们考虑语言,语言

可能已经存在了十五

万年,至少八

万年,它作为人们所说的语言而产生的,

这可能是我们

基因上指定的,因为这就是我们

使用语言的方式 ost 写作

是在很久以后才出现的,正如我们

在上次谈话中看到的

那样,关于这件事发生的确切时间存在一些争议,

但根据传统

估计,如果人类已经存在 24

小时,那么写作只在

11 点左右出现: 晚上 7 点 这就是

横向的东西写作有多少首先是

他们的演讲然后

写作作为一种技巧现在不要

误会我

写作时写作有一定的优势

因为这是一个有意识的过程

因为你可以向后看你可以

做到

例如,如果您只是在说话,那么用语言的可能性要

小得多 其中,塞雷娜本人

的主要领导人给出的可耻例子

是,

但让

我们面对现实吧

一些完全

不同的语言学家实际上已经表明

,当我们以一种

不受监控的方式随意说话时,我们倾向于用大约

七个单词包说话 十个字

,如果你有

机会记录自己或

一群人的谈话,你会注意到这一点,这就是演讲,就像

演讲一样,更宽松,

更具电报性,更少

反思,与写作非常不同,

所以我们自然倾向于认为,因为 我们

经常看到语言被写出来,

这就是语言,但

实际上语言是语言,它们

现在当然是两件事,因为历史已经过去

在语言和写作之间有一定程度的流血是

很自然的,例如 在一个遥远的

时代,现在一个人发表

演讲基本上像写作一样说话是很常见的,所以

我的意思是你看到

有人在一部老电影中发表的那种演讲,

他们清了清嗓子,而不是

女士们,先生们,然后他们

以某种

与随意讲话无关的方式说话 它是正式的 它使用

像这样的长句子 给定一个它

基本上是像你写的那样说话,

所以例如我们在想 这些

天来关于林肯的事情是因为电影

葛底斯堡

演说不是那次活动的主食,两个小时

前爱德华埃弗雷特谈到了一个

坦率地说今天无法吸引我们的话题,

当时几乎没有这样做的重点是

听他 像写一样说话

普通人

站着听了两个小时 很

自然这就是人们所做的 然后

像写一样

说话 只是在材料

机械意义上,这在当时更难

,原因很简单,

材料不借给它,所以

除了速记之外几乎不可能用你的手来做到这一点,

然后通信仅限于

手动打字机它 非常困难

,即使我们有电动

打字机或电脑

键盘,事实是即使您

可以轻松打字以跟上 e

说话的速度或多或少你必须

有人可以快速接收你的消息

一旦你

口袋里有东西可以接收该消息

然后你就有条件

允许我们可以像我们说话一样写作,

这就是发短信的地方 因此,

发短信的结构非常松散,没有人在发短信时会

考虑大写字母或

标点符号,但是

当您说“不”时,您又会考虑这些事情

,因此,

尽管事实上,您在发短信时为什么要发短信是什么

它涉及

我们称之为写作的东西的粗暴机制,

这就是现在发短信的内容

结构上缺乏对规则的关注

,我们习惯于

在黑板上学习,所以我们认为

有些地方出了问题,这是一个版本 y

自然的感觉,但事实

是,正在发生的事情是一种

涌现的复杂性,这就是我们

在这个手指演讲中看到的,

以便理解它我们想要看到的

是这种新语言的方式

出现了新的结构

,例如,在发短信时有一个

约定,现在大声笑,我们

通常认为是大声笑出来的意思

,当然理论上它确实如此,

如果您查看比人们

使用它实际表示的旧文本

大声笑,但如果你现在发短信,或者如果你

是一个知道

发短信的基础

的人,你会注意到大声笑

不再意味着大声笑,它已经

演变成

更微妙的东西,这是一个实际的文本 不久前

由一个大约 20 岁的非男性完成

我喜欢你使用的字体 bTW Julie

Lal 谢谢 gmail 现在速度很慢

你想想这并不好笑

没有人在笑,但是 t 在这里,

你假设发生了某种

打嗝,然后苏珊说,当你谈论这些不便时,我知道

比我们习惯的更多的笑声,

所以朱莉说我刚刚给

你发了一封电子邮件苏珊 lul 我明白了

有趣的人,如果这就是这个意思,

那么朱莉说,苏珊刘怎么了,我

必须写一篇 10 页的论文,她不

觉得好笑让我们想想,lul 的

使用方式非常特殊

我们语言学家称这种

东西为语用助词 任何

真正的人使用的口语都有

它们 如果你碰巧说日语

想想

你在很多句子末尾使用的那个小词网

说话 想想这个词的使用

yo hold dissertations 可以

写关于它,可能正在

写关于它 一个语用助词

,这就是 Lal 逐渐变成的

它是一种在 ac 之间使用语言的方式

tual people

另一个例子是 slash,现在我们可以

按照我们习惯

的方式使用 slash,就像我们将要举办一个

派对 slash 网络会议,

有点像我们在 slash 中使用

的 今天年轻人发短信的不同方式

它习惯于

改变场景,例如,这个萨莉

人说,所以我需要找人

放松一下,杰克说哈哈,你会

写一篇关于哈哈的论文——但我们

没有时间 因为那个

哈哈所以你自己去为什么

莎莉参加纽约大学的这个暑期课程

杰克哈哈/我正在看这个视频,

儿子们试图用一只

眼睛射击斜线很有趣我什至不

知道杰克是什么

在那之后谈论,

但你注意到他

现在正在改变话题,这似乎有点平凡,但

想想在现实生活中,如果我们

正在谈话,我们想

改变话题,

优雅地做的方式,你不只是拉链 就在

里面你会拍拍你的大腿然后看 好吧,

若有所思地走远了,或者

你会说一些让你

思考的东西,而实际上它并没有,但

你真正

想要做的是改变话题

,而你不能这样做 在这种媒介中发短信等方式或

发展方式

所有口语都有

语言学家所说的新信息标记,

或者两三个短信已经

从这个斜线发展出来,所以我们有

一整套正在开发的新结构

,但它是 容易思考

问题仍然存在

缺乏某种结构 它

不像华尔街日报的语言那么复杂

问题的

事实是看看这个人在 1956

年,那时还没有发短信 我

爱露西还在播出 许多人

不知道字母表或乘法

表不能写格式 我们以前听说

过这种事情

不仅仅是在 1956 年 1917 年康涅狄格州的

老师 1917 年这是

我们都假设的时候 t 一切

在写作方面都是完美的,因为

唐顿庄园的人或

口齿伶俐或类似的东西,

所以全国每所大学的哭声都在

上升,我们的新生不能拼写

不能标点符号等等,你可以

走得更远 比这更早的是

1871 年的哈佛校长 没有

电的人有三个名字

拼写错误的正确性和

写作的优雅性

他说的是那些

为大学学习做好充分准备的人

你可以走得更远

1841 一些失散已久的学监

很不高兴,因为他长期以来一直

遗憾地注意到

几乎完全忽视了原来的

废话废话,或者你可以

用 63 广告一路回去,这个可怜的人

没有 ‘不喜欢人们说拉丁语的方式

,因为碰巧他正在写

什么已经变成了法语,

所以总是有人

担心这些事情,而且t 他的星球

似乎一直在旋转,所以

这些天我想发短信的方式

是,我们看到的是一种

全新的写作方式,

年轻人正在开发这种写作方式,他们正在

使用他们的普通写作

技巧,而且 意味着他们

能够做两件事 越来越多的证据是

,双语在认知上是

有益的

人们

今天当然是无意识地使用今天的,

但这是他们

语言曲目的扩展,如果

有人从 1973 年开始查看

1993 年宿舍留言板上的内容,那么

俚语

自爱情故事时代以来会发生一些变化,但他们

会明白那个

留言板上的内容 不久前 1993 年的那个人

这是你知道 Bill

& Ted 的优秀

冒险 人们,他们今天读了

一个 20 岁的人写的非常典型的文字,

他们经常不知道其中的

一半是什么意思,因为

在我们的年轻人中间已经发展出一种全新的语言,

他们做的

事情就像我们在他们 '

正在他们的小设备上打转,

所以在结束时,如果我能进入

未来,如果我能进入 2033 年,

我首先要问的是大卫西蒙是否

已经完成了我想知道的电线续集

,我真的会问

然后我

想知道唐顿庄园到底发生了什么,那

是第二件事,第三

件事是请给我看一捆

16岁女孩写的文字,

因为我想知道 这种

语言

自我们时代以来就在哪里发展起来,理想情况下

,我现在会把它们寄回给你和我,这样我们

就可以检查

在我们眼皮底下发生的这种语言奇迹

,非常感谢你