Southwind17
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2007
- Messages
- 5,154
I have not been a member of this forum for long, but have noticed that many threads quickly resort to focusing on the definition or meaning of a word or term posted, often to the detriment of the original intent of the OP. I realize that in many cases clear definition is necessary, as the direction and meaning of the thread is dependent on having clarity, and posters need to realize that too. I have a question though:
Just because a word in common usage has evolved from its original meaning to have a new wide-spread meaning does that necessarily mean that the new meaning should be deemed acceptable?
A good example is the word 'massive'. 'Massive' is commonly, almost exclusively, used today as a synonym for 'large'. I heard on the BBC World Service only this morning reference to a 'massive car bomb'. I doubt that the bomb itself was any more massive than every other recent bomb produced. To my mind 'massive' is a reference to the relative mass of a body. Lead, the metal, is massive, even in minute quantities; air is not, even in large volumes. The most serious misuse of this word is in reference to a 'massive hole', which is possibly one of the best examples of a contradiction.
I read recently that new words are not recognized as such in new editions of dictionaries just because somebody has invented them and uses them. They have to be widely used by the general populace or field in which they are intended to apply. I have some qualm with that principle, given the origin of many such words, namely the youth of today (I'm generalizing, I know). The same seems to be the case, though, with usage of existing words, hence the multiple definitions that we tend to see now in dictionaries covering almost all possible scenarios. "Dictionary.com" does, indeed, include "large in scale, amount or degree" as one of the legitimate definitions of "massive", citing "a massive breakdown in communications; massive reductions in spending." as examples.
What do members feel about these phenomena, and what impact is it having on the efficacy of meaningful, constructive debate?
Just because a word in common usage has evolved from its original meaning to have a new wide-spread meaning does that necessarily mean that the new meaning should be deemed acceptable?
A good example is the word 'massive'. 'Massive' is commonly, almost exclusively, used today as a synonym for 'large'. I heard on the BBC World Service only this morning reference to a 'massive car bomb'. I doubt that the bomb itself was any more massive than every other recent bomb produced. To my mind 'massive' is a reference to the relative mass of a body. Lead, the metal, is massive, even in minute quantities; air is not, even in large volumes. The most serious misuse of this word is in reference to a 'massive hole', which is possibly one of the best examples of a contradiction.
I read recently that new words are not recognized as such in new editions of dictionaries just because somebody has invented them and uses them. They have to be widely used by the general populace or field in which they are intended to apply. I have some qualm with that principle, given the origin of many such words, namely the youth of today (I'm generalizing, I know). The same seems to be the case, though, with usage of existing words, hence the multiple definitions that we tend to see now in dictionaries covering almost all possible scenarios. "Dictionary.com" does, indeed, include "large in scale, amount or degree" as one of the legitimate definitions of "massive", citing "a massive breakdown in communications; massive reductions in spending." as examples.
What do members feel about these phenomena, and what impact is it having on the efficacy of meaningful, constructive debate?