You must use complete sentences when speaking to me, Harry Potter!
In London last week, Ralph Fiennes best known for playing Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter series, blamed social media sites like Twitter for the deterioration of the English language.
While accepting an award from The British Film Institute, Fiennes had this to say about the state of language today:
"[Language] is being eroded---it's changing. Our expressivenes and our ease with some words is being diluted so that the sentence with more that one clause is a problem for us, and the word of more than two syllables is a problem for us."
Needless to say, Fiennes' statements did not go over to well with some in the tech community. Alex Knapp a tech and social media writer for Forbes online, however sympathized with Fiennes. He writes that he too was skeptical of Twitter, like so many things in life, until he got to know it.
Knapp says the humorous hashtags and intriging conversation that can happen in 140 words and the "nuanced jokes that I think would be difficult to pull off otherwise." as reasons for his eroding his skepticism. Finally, accepting Twitter for the virtual coffee shop that it is.
Knapp cites Mark Leibman a Professor of Linguistics to prove Fiennes wrong. Professor Liebman studied the amount of characters in words in Hamlet and from student tweets to the Daily Pennsylvanian at the University of Pennsylvania. He found that the words in tweets actually more more characters than those in Hamlet.
Me, I guess I'm still kind of on the fence.
As an English major, I sure don't want to see the great works of literature transformed to 140 characters.
#Hamlet: Dad dead, Mom re-married to Uncle, lies, deceit, gave big speech, lots of killing.
Not quite the same, on the other hand, I can see the worth of short, concise bursts of information. I hate long boring meetings at work. Just give me the bullet points and let me get back to work.
So, that part of me can embrace the concept of Twitter, but another part doesn't care what you had for lunch and it's envitable aftermath.
That is informatuon that I can do without.
