Language. Where the frick did it come from, and who is in charge of maintaining it?
We have things like Webster's Dictionary that has the power to magically add words to the English language. We have long lists of rules about grammar, spelling, and pronunciation.
But whose job is it to decide what is right and what it wrong? Where did grammar come from? Why is it wrong that I just ended that question with a preposition? Why is wrong that I started this paragraph with the word "but?"
Now, don't get me wrong. I am generally a stickler for grammar, and I will point out mistakes whenever I see them. My manager used to post memos to his employees on the bulletin board, and I would edit them with a red pen because they were so full of mistakes! "At least that means you're reading it," he would respond.
When grammar rules change or evolve, how does that happen? Is there some secret society of English professors sitting in a stuffy library somewhere making up these rules?
We have things like Webster's Dictionary that has the power to magically add words to the English language. We have long lists of rules about grammar, spelling, and pronunciation.
But whose job is it to decide what is right and what it wrong? Where did grammar come from? Why is it wrong that I just ended that question with a preposition? Why is wrong that I started this paragraph with the word "but?"
Now, don't get me wrong. I am generally a stickler for grammar, and I will point out mistakes whenever I see them. My manager used to post memos to his employees on the bulletin board, and I would edit them with a red pen because they were so full of mistakes! "At least that means you're reading it," he would respond.
When grammar rules change or evolve, how does that happen? Is there some secret society of English professors sitting in a stuffy library somewhere making up these rules?