Bunuel
The proliferation of colloquialisms is degrading the English language. A phrase such as she was like, "no way!" you know?—a meaningless collection of English words just a few decades ago—is commonly understood by most today to mean she was doubtful. No language can admit imprecise word usage on a large scale without a corresponding decrease in quality.
Which of the following, if true, most weakens the argument above?
(A) Linguists have shown that the use of imprecise language on a small scale does not generally impair understanding.
(B) Many colloquialisms that appeared in earlier forms of the English language disappeared over time as the people who used those particular phrasings were assimilated into larger groups with different language patterns.
(C) Dissemination of a new word or phrase by the mass media is an important factor in whether or not the new word or phrase will become a colloquialism.
(D) Colloquialisms are more likely to be coined by the youth in a culture than by any other segment of the population.
(E) Languages of the highest quality often evolve over time out of a collection of colloquial usages woven into the formal dialect of a given people.
Let us start with breaking down the argument.
The proliferation of colloquialisms is degrading the English language. A phrase such as she was like, "no way!" you know?—a meaningless collection of English words just a few decades ago—is commonly understood by most today to mean she was doubtful. No language can admit imprecise word usage on a large scale without a corresponding decrease in quality.
Premise 1 - No language can admit imprecise word usage on a large scale without a corresponding decrease in quality.
Premise 2 (complements premise 1) - A phrase such as she was like, "no way!" you know?—a meaningless collection of English words just a few decades ago—is commonly understood by most today to mean she was doubtful.
Conclusion - The proliferation of colloquialisms is degrading the English language.
Both premise 1 and 2 are reasons offered to together prove (inductively) that the proliferation of colloquialisms is degrading the English language.
We can rewrite this argument as:
No language can admit imprecise word usage on a large scale without a corresponding decrease in quality. A phrase such as she was like, "no way!" you know?—a meaningless collection of English words just a few decades ago—is commonly understood by most today to mean she was doubtful. Therefore, the proliferation of colloquialisms is degrading the English language.
The argument is weak on multiple counts. First, it does not explain why admitting imprecise word usage leads to a corresponding decrease in quality. Second, just because something was meaningless ages ago does not imply it needs to continue remain meaningless. Third, it takes a couple of things for granted, including a decrease in quality leads to the degradation of a language and that imprecise word usage are at par with colloquialisms. How do we know these things? It is safe to say that the argument is uncogent.
What we are seeking now is one reason that proves that the proliferation of colloquialism is not degrading the English language as we are to weaken the argument. Let us now go through the answer choices.
(A) Linguists have shown that the use of imprecise language on a small scale does not generally impair understanding. - We are dealing with proliferation here. - ELIMINATE
(B) Many colloquialisms that appeared in earlier forms of the English language disappeared over time as the people who used those particular phrasings were assimilated into larger groups with different language patterns. - Okay. But that does not mean their proliferation does not degrade a language. - ELIMINATE
(C) Dissemination of a new word or phrase by the mass media is an important factor in whether or not the new word or phrase will become a colloquialism. - So? How is that linked to what we are proving? - ELIMINATE
(D) Colloquialisms are more likely to be coined by the youth in a culture than by any other segment of the population. - Irrelevant. - ELIMINATE
(E) Languages of the highest quality often evolve over time out of a collection of colloquial usages woven into the formal dialect of a given people. - Bingo! This choice implies that the proliferation of colloquialism is not degrading the English language but any language of highest quality tends to evolve out of a collection of colloquial usages, and these usages get woven into the formal dialect of a given people. Get back to both the premises now. So, no, there is no degradation that happens as per this choice but evolution. - HOLD
Any thoughts? Any disagreements with the explanations?
Lemme know!
B Sudharsan
Founder of the
Literary Zeitgeist