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Every year, about 1,000 new words are
added to the Oxford English Dictionary.
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Where do they come from
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and how do they make it
into our everyday lives?
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With over 170,000 words currently in use
in the English language,
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it might seem we already have plenty.
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Yet, as our world changes,
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new ideas and inventions bring forth,
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and science progresses,
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our existing words leave gaps
in what we want to express
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and we fill those gaps
in several ingenious,
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practical,
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and occasionally peculiar, ways.
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One way is to absorb a word
from another language.
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English has borrowed so many words
over its history
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that nearly half of its vocabulary
comes directly from other languages.
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Sometimes, this is simply because
the thing the word describes
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was borrowed itself.
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Rome and France brought legal
and religious concepts,
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like altar and jury, to Medieval England,
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while trade brought crops and cuisine,
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like Arabic coffee,
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Italian spaghetti,
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and Indian curry.
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But sometimes, another language
has just the right word
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for a complex idea or emotion,
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like naïveté
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machismo,
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or schadenfreude.
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Scientists also use classical languages
to name new concepts.
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Clone, for example, was derived from
the Ancient Greek word for twig
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to describe creating a new plant
from a piece of the old.
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And today, the process works both ways,
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with English lending words like software
to languages all over the world.
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Another popular way
to fill a vocabulary gap
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is by combining existing words that each
convey part of the new concept.
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This can be done by combining two
whole words into a compound word,
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like airport
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or starfish,
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or by clipping and blending parts of words
together, like spork,
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brunch,
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or internet.
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And unlike borrowings
from other languages,
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these can often be understood
the first time you hear them.
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And sometimes a new word isn't new at all.
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Obsolete words gain new life by adopting
new meanings.
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Villain originally meant a peasant farmer,
but in a twist of aristocratic snobbery
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came to mean someone not bound
by the knightly code of chivalry,
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and therefore, a bad person.
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A geek went from
being a carnival performer
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to any strange person,
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to a specific type of awkward genius.
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And other times, words come to mean
their opposite through irony,
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metaphor,
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or misuse,
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like when sick or wicked are used
to describe something literally amazing.
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But if words can be formed
in all these ways,
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why do some become mainstream
while others fall out of use
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or never catch on in the first place?
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Sometimes, the answer is simple,
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as when scientists or companies
give an official name to a new discovery
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or technology.
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And some countries have language academies
to make the decisions.
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But for the most part, official sources
like dictionaries
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only document current usage.
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New words don't originate from above,
but from ordinary people
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spreading words that
hit the right combination
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of useful and catchy.
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Take the word meme,
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coined in the 1970s
by sociobiologist Richard Dawkins
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from the Ancient Greek for imitation.
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He used it to describe how ideas
and symbols propagate through a culture
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like genes through a population.
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With the advent of the Internet,
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the process became directly observable
in how jokes and images
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were popularized at lightning speed.
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And soon, the word came to refer
to a certain kind of image.
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So meme not only describes how words
become part of language,
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the word is a meme itself.
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And there's a word for this phenomenon
of words that describe themselves,
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autological.
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Not all new words are created equal.
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Some stick around for millennia,
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some adapt to changing times,
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and others die off.
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Some relay information,
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some interpret it,
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but the way these words are created
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and the journey they take to become
part of our speech
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tells us a lot about our world
and how we communicate within it.
Maurício Kakuei Tanaka
Hello!
Could you please transcribe the English subtitles from the minute 4:55 of this video?
Thank you!
Regards,
Maurício Tanaka