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I'm a lexicographer.
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I make dictionaries.
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And my job as a lexicographer
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is to try to put all the words possible
into the dictionary.
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My job is not to decide what a word is;
that is your job.
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Everybody who speaks English
decides together
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what's a word and what's not a word.
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Every language is just a group of people
who agree to understand each other.
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Now, sometimes when people are trying
to decide whether a word is good or bad,
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they don't really have a good reason.
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So they say something like,
"Because grammar!"
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(Laughter)
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I don't actually really care about grammar
too much -- don't tell anybody.
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But the word "grammar," actually,
there are two kinds of grammar.
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There's the kind of grammar
that lives inside your brain,
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and if you're a native
speaker of a language
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or a good speaker of a language,
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it's the unconscious rules that you follow
when you speak that language.
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And this is what you learn when
you learn a language as a child.
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And here's an example:
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This is a wug, right?
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It's a wug.
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Now there is another one.
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There are two of these.
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There are two ...
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Audience: Wugs.
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Erin McKean: Exactly! You know
how to make the plural of wug.
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That rule lives in your brain.
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You never had to be taught this rule,
you just understand it.
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This is an experiment that was invented
by a professor at [Boston University]
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named Jean Berko Gleason back in 1958.
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So we've been talking about this
for a long time.
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Now, these kinds of natural rules
that exist in your brain,
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they're not like traffic laws,
they're more like laws of nature.
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And nobody has to remind you to obey
a law of nature, right?
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When you leave the house in the morning,
your mom doesn't say,
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"Hey, honey, I think
it's going to be cold, take a hoodie,
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don't forget to obey the law of gravity."
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Nobody says this.
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Now, there are other rules that are more
about manners than they are about nature.
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So you can think of a word as like a hat.
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Once you know how hats work
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nobody has to tell you,
"Don't wear hats on your feet."
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What they have to tell you is,
"Can you wear hats inside?
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Who gets to wear a hat?
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What are the kinds of hats you get
to wear?"
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Those are more of the second kind
of grammar,
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which linguists often call usage,
as opposed to grammar.
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Now, sometimes people use this kind of
rules-based grammar
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to discourage people from making up words.
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And I think that is, well, stupid.
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So, for example,
people are always telling you,
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"Be creative, make new music, do art,
invent things, science and technology."
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But when it comes to
words, they're like,
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"Don't! No. Creativity stops right here,
whipper-snappers. Give it a rest."
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(Laughter).
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But that makes no sense to me.
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Words are great, we should have
more of them.
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I want you to make as many new words
as possible.
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And I'm going to tell you six ways that
you can use to make new words in English.
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The first way is the simplest way.
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Basically, steal them from other
languages.
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(Laughter).
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Linguists call this borrowing,
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but we never give the words back
so I'm just going to be honest
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and call it stealing.
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We usually take words for things
that we like, like delicious food.
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We took "cumquat" from Chinese,
we took "caramel" from French.
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We also take words for cool things
like "ninja", right?
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We took that from Japanese,
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which is kind of a cool trick because
ninjas are hard to steal from.
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(Laughter).
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So another way that you can make words
in English
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is by squishing two other English words
together,
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this is called compounding.
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Words in English are like Lego,
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if you use enough force, you can put any two
of them together.
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(Laughter).
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We do this all the time in English:
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words like "heartbroken", "bookworm",
"sandcastle",
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-- all are compounds.
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So go ahead and make words like
"duckface", just don't make duckface.
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(Laughter).
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Another way you can make words
in English is kind of like compounding,
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but instead you use so much force
when you squish the words together
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that some parts fall off.
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So these are blend words,
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like "Brunch" is a blend of "breakfast"
and" lunch".
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"Motel" is a blend of "motor" and "hotel".
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Who here knew that "motel"
was a blend word?
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Yeah, that word is so old in English
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that lots of people don't know that
there are parts missing.
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"Edutainment" is a blend of "education" and
"entertainment".
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And of course "electrocute" is a
blend of "electric" and "execute".
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You can also make words by changing
how they operate,
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this is called functional shift.
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You take one word that act as one part
of speech,
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and you change it into another
part of speech.
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Okay, who here knew that "friend"
hasn't always been a verb?
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"Friend" used to be noun
and then we verbed it.
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Almost any word in English can be verbed.
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You can also take adjectives and make them
into nouns.
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"Commercial" used to be an adjective
and now it's a noun.
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And of course, you can "green" things.
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Another way to make words
in English is back-formation.
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You can take a word and you can
kind of squish it down a little bit.
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So for example, in English we had the word
"editor" before we had the word "edit".
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"Edit" was formed from "editor".
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Sometimes these back-formations
sound a little silly:
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bulldozers bulldoze, butlers butle
and burglers burgle.
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(Laughter).
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Another way to make words in English
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is to take the first letters of something
and squish them together.
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So National Aeronautics and Space
Administration becomes NASA.
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And of course you can do this
with anything, OMG!
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So it doesn't matter how silly
the words are.
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They can be really good words of English.
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"Absquatulate" is a perfectly good word
of English
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"Mugwump" is a perfectly good word
of English.
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So the words don't have have to sound
normal, they can sound really silly.
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Why should you make words?
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You should make words because every word
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is a chance to express your idea and get
your meaning across.
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And new words grab people's attention.
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They get people to focus on what
you're saying
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and that gives you a better chance to get
your meaning across.
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A lot of people on this stage today
have said,
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"In the future, you can do this,
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you can help with this, you can help us explore,
you can help us invent."
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You can make a new word right now.
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English has no age limit.
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Go ahead, start making words today,
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send them to me, and I will put them
in my online dictionary word bank.
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Thank you so much.
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(Applause).