Words Words Words

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Words Words WordsI recently read Words Words Words, by David Crystal. It's a popular science book (or should that be "popular lingustics"?) inviting readers of all backgrounds to discover the magic of words, and lexical investigation in general. The book is split into six parts: the universe of words; the origins of words; the diversity of words; the evolution of words; the enjoyment of words; and becoming a word detective, with between four and seven chapters per part.

Crystal writes in an easy-going informal style, which makes it very easy to follow and read through. Crystal's deep passion for words, and the English langyage in particular, is evident in his prose, with the enthusiasm leaping out the page at you, in the form of diverse quotations from literature both classical and contemporary, pictures from around the world, and amusing anecdotes about words and word-usage. Crystal's passion is infectious. Although I study linguistics, I can't say I find the lexicon to be the most fascinating area of study, and I get quite annoyed when people think that I "study words". Yet this book has really opened my eyes to the vast panorama of lexical beauty available to us - to all of us. And with chapter headings like Wordsmithery, Wordmelodies, Worddeaths, and Wordworlds, who can say no?

Along the way, Crystal addresses the language critics, naysayers, and doom-mongers who "reflect gloomily on the present state of the language, make dire prophecies about its future, and wish things were like the earlier golden age they remember so well" (p156), noting that such comments are as old as the language itself. He notes the perfectly natural stages of semantic shift and of word death, while also pointing out that new coinages or borrowings can greatly enhance English's expressiveness.

If you're interested in words, and in the English language in particular, but don't want to have to deal with preachy, badly-researched books, nor wade through a dense academic text, this book is ideal. Crystal is filling a sorely-felt gap in the popular linguistics genre - books written by actual linguists! As influential as Melvyn Bragg or Lynn Truss may be, they have no formal linguistics training, and often serve only to give linguists a bad name.

One, very minor, criticism I have of this book is that the references are scattered throughout the text, and not collated at the end. Having said that, Crystal is very methodical in his reporting of sources, and encourages us to be likewise. You can read his blog here.

Crystal, David. Words Words Words. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007. (UK Paperback edition.)

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Sarah said:

I do love David Crystal, just because his writing style meant that a lot of the first and second year readings were actually fun to read. Didn't know he had a blog though, thanks for the link!

Lynne Truss makes me want to cry, because while I'm all about the proper use of apostrophes I'm too indoctrinated into the school of "describe not prescribe", and also because she really doesn't know what she's talking about. The Balderdash and Piffle books are also semi-decent reads, again, not a trained linguist but also not pretending to be.

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This page contains a single entry by Rory published on March 26, 2008 3:34 PM.

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