Some thoughts on slang
Slang is a self-sufficient, subversive, oppositional subset of the English language. It has given a tongue, by no means inarticulate, to the marginal, the criminal and the dispossessed for at least half a millennium. But it is hard to pin down: even the etymology of the word ‘slang’ remai...
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2011-11-01
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Online Access: | https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2011-n24-some-thoughts-on-slang |
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doaj-7a241d4ec88a4a51b7a18262f1896c2b2020-11-25T03:54:40ZengUniversidad de AlicanteRevista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses0214-48082171-861X2011-11-012415310.14198/raei.2011.24.064763Some thoughts on slangGreen, Jonathon Slang is a self-sufficient, subversive, oppositional subset of the English language. It has given a tongue, by no means inarticulate, to the marginal, the criminal and the dispossessed for at least half a millennium. But it is hard to pin down: even the etymology of the word ‘slang’ remains unsubstantiated. Perhaps inevitably it challenges concrete linguistic definition, remaining a source of argument: is it a full scale language or simply a lexis of synonymy. And what exactly constitutes a ‘slang’ word, what qualifies it for inclusion in that lexis? Whatever the ‘truth’ it remains a flourishing and endlessly self-inventive channel of communication. As a slang lexicographer of thirty years’ experience, I have come to ask another question: to what extent does any of this matter? Slang is important, slang dictionaries are important, even slang lexicographers are important. But this need to pin down, to categorise, to set in place: is it vital? Does it not run almost perversely in the face of slang’s own imperatives: to represent without compromise – through its obsessions and its relentlessly negative, cynical take on the world – a side of humanity that some, including myself, see as our most human.https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2011-n24-some-thoughts-on-slang |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Green, Jonathon |
spellingShingle |
Green, Jonathon Some thoughts on slang Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses |
author_facet |
Green, Jonathon |
author_sort |
Green, Jonathon |
title |
Some thoughts on slang |
title_short |
Some thoughts on slang |
title_full |
Some thoughts on slang |
title_fullStr |
Some thoughts on slang |
title_full_unstemmed |
Some thoughts on slang |
title_sort |
some thoughts on slang |
publisher |
Universidad de Alicante |
series |
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses |
issn |
0214-4808 2171-861X |
publishDate |
2011-11-01 |
description |
Slang is a self-sufficient, subversive, oppositional subset of the English language. It has given a tongue, by no means inarticulate, to the marginal, the criminal and the dispossessed for at least half a millennium. But it is hard to pin down: even the etymology of the word ‘slang’ remains unsubstantiated. Perhaps inevitably it challenges concrete linguistic definition, remaining a source of argument: is it a full scale language or simply a lexis of synonymy. And what exactly constitutes a ‘slang’ word, what qualifies it for inclusion in that lexis? Whatever the ‘truth’ it remains a flourishing and endlessly self-inventive channel of communication. As a slang lexicographer of thirty years’ experience, I have come to ask another question: to what extent does any of this matter? Slang is important, slang dictionaries are important, even slang lexicographers are important. But this need to pin down, to categorise, to set in place: is it vital? Does it not run almost perversely in the face of slang’s own imperatives: to represent without compromise – through its obsessions and its relentlessly negative, cynical take on the world – a side of humanity that some, including myself, see as our most human. |
url |
https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2011-n24-some-thoughts-on-slang |
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