Reading Passage 3
It is to these standards that I hope Strictly English is looking. Our language is to a great
extent settled and codified, and to a standard that people recognise and are comfortable
with. All my book does is describe and commend that standard, and help people towards
a capable grasp of the English tongue. We shall always need
new words to describe new
things, but we don’t need the wrong word to describe the right thing, when the right word
exists. Also, English grammar shouldn’t be a matter for debate. It has a coherent and
logical structure and we should stick to it.
Some groups of people - state officials, academics, lawyers, certain breeds of
scientist - talk to each other in a private language. Some official documents make
little sense to lay people because they have to be written
in a language that combines
avoidance of the politically incorrect with constant use of the contemporary jargon of the
profession. Some articles written by academics in particular are almost incomprehensible
to those outside their circle. This is not because the outsiders are stupid. It is because
the academics feel they have to write in a certain stilted, dense way in order to be taken
seriously by their peers.
Many officials seem to have lost the knack of communicating with people outside their
closed world. Some academics, however, are bilingual. If asked
to write for a publication
outside the circle - such as a newspaper - they can rediscover the knack of writing
reasonably plain English. They do not indulge themselves in such a fashion when they
write for learned journals. It is almost as though the purpose of such writing is not to
be clear: that the writer is recording research in order to prove to peers or superiors
that he has discovered something. It does not seem to bother such people that their
style is considered ugly and barbaric by anyone of discernment. It is repetitious, long-
winded, abstract and abstruse. Those who write in such a way probably will
not easily be
discouraged, unless what is considered acceptable within their disciplines changes.
The ideal style is one comprehensible to any intelligent person. If you make a conscious
decision to communicate with a select group, so be it: but in trying to appeal to a large
audience, or even a small one that you wish to be sure will understand your meaning,
writing of the sort mentioned above will not do. This sort of writing used to be kept from the
general public thanks to the need to find someone to publish it. The advent of the Internet
means that it is now much more widespread than it used to be;
and the fact that it is now
so common and so accessible means that this sort of writing is having a harmful effect on
the language and causing it to be corrupted.