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- From: gmw1@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu (Gabe M Wiener)
- Subject: Re: Standards
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.222204.15965@news.columbia.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.columbia.edu (The Network News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cunixa.cc.columbia.edu
- Reply-To: gmw1@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu (Gabe M Wiener)
- Organization: Columbia University
- References: <BzJtqF.D8L@constellation.ecn.uoknor.edu> <1992Dec21.052204.9530@news.columbia.edu> <BzMtxB.F8w@constellation.ecn.uoknor.edu>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 22:22:04 GMT
- Lines: 100
-
- In article <BzMtxB.F8w@constellation.ecn.uoknor.edu> mmmirash@midway.ecn.uoknor.edu (Mandar M. Mirashi) writes:
- >
- >>What standard? Whose? Where do we find it? Who speaks it? The Queen?
- >>Surely not, because when she dies, what if the next monarch (if there is
- >>a next monarch) speaks a little differently?
- >
- >Notice the words "little differently". There isn't likely to be a
- >significant change in standards of speech. Whatever minor change
- >occurs, can be accommodated.
-
- Oh, I see. So we're back to pre-metric days, when the reigning monarch's
- foot was the measurement. Change the king, change the yardstick. Language
- doesn't work that way...never has. You're nuts if you think that the brits
- really follow how the queen speaks. Most of them never hear her except once
- a year on television anyway.
-
- >The new monarch will constitute the
- >standard. If the British reject the monarch as a standard, then
- >the BBC will be the standard.
-
- And if the British reject the BBC as a standard? Who's next?
-
- >>The BBC? They have
- >>forsaken you. There is no more standard for the news readers.
- >
- >This argument is similar to : "There is nothing common between birds.
- >Every bird looks different". Don't you realise that EVERY bird has
- >standard characteristics? That is why we call it a bird!
-
- Nice metaphor, wrong link. The bird argument is a good one, but not
- for your point. Sure, we recognize certain things as birds and certain
- things as non-birds. Just as we recognize certain things as English and
- certain things as non-English. If you hear German, you know it isn't
- English. If you see a Platypus, you know it ain't no bird. If you hear
- English as spoken in Scotland, you know it's still English, just as if
- you hear it in New York, London, Montreal, or Melbourne. All these
- dialects share common characteristics that let us say "That's English."
-
- >Similarly,
- >the standard would be the common grounds between different BBC
- >newsreaders. When the pronunciation of a word is suspect, the
- >majority's opinion must be considered.
-
- The majority of what? The BBC News Readers? AAAAAAh. So your
- standard is dependent on what the personnel office of the BBC is
- doing in a given year? What if the BBC's lead commentator retires
- and is replaced by someone with a thick Northern accent? Does the
- international "standard" suddenly change? I doubt it. The BBC has
- people in London, Oxford, Edinburgh, Wales, Moscow, New York,
- Los Angeles, Taiwan, Bangkok, etc. How is it a practical standard?
- You hear dozens of different accents and dialects, none of which is
- in any way better than any other.
-
- >If the Queen were no longer to be considered as the standard
- [...]
- >The flaw in your argument is that you are trying to narrow down the
- >standard accent to a single...individual.
-
- *I* am? You're the one who wants the queen or the BBC or something
- arbitrary to be the standard.
-
- >When countries are considered, the English spoken in England is the
- >highest standard (now don't say "By whom in England?". I mean the
- >common characteristics of the English accent.)
-
- You obviously haven't spent much time in England, then. I have.
- There *is* no standard to the English accent. There are just a lot
- of them, just as there are lots of American accents.
-
- You still haven't explained why the English spoken in English is the
- highest standard, other than saying "Because it is." And the English
- spoken in England today wasn't born in England. If you want a language
- born in England, you'd better go back to pre-1066. Other than that,
- the language spoken in England is made up of components from all over
- the world.
-
- >If the correct
- >standard *within* England itself were up to debate, then the BBC
- >standard would be the correct standard.
-
- Why?
-
- >I have met a lot of Britons on IRC.
-
- Maybe you ought to get off IRC and go live a little. Listen to the
- language used by the majority of the world, and then try to come up
- with ONE ARGUMENT that substantiates anything you have said.
-
- >this doesn't prove that the majority of British believe so; but,
- >if it were found that the majority reject the Queen as a standard
- >then the BBC should be considered as the standard.
-
- Once again, why? What has the BBC got in its favor to set a standard?
-
-
- --
- Gabe Wiener - Columbia Univ. "This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings
- gmw1@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu to be seriously considered as a means of
- N2GPZ in ham radio circles communication. The device is inherently of
- 72355,1226 on CI$ no value to us." -Western Union memo, 1877
-