Society for Pure English, Tract 02 - On English Homophones by Robert Seymour Bridges;Society for Pure English
page 77 of 94 (81%)
page 77 of 94 (81%)
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is actively productive of homophones. This present Section 6 is
contending that the mischief is being encouraged and propagated by the phoneticians, and Mr. Jones' books are taken as an example of their method. [Sidenote: Fault of Mr. Jones' method.] The reason why the work of these phoneticians is so mischievous is that they have chosen too low a standard of pronunciation. The defence that they would make would be something like this. They might argue with some confidence, and not without a good show of reason, that the actual 'vernacular' talk of the people is the living language of any country: they would allege that a spoken language is always changing, and always will change; that the actual condition of it is the only scientific, and indeed the only possible basis for any system of tuition; and that it is better to be rather in advance of change than behind it, since the changes proceed inevitably by laws which education has no power to resist, nay, so inevitably that science can in some measure foresee the future. This would, I suppose, fairly represent Mr. Jones' contention. Indeed, he plainly asserts that his work is merely a record of existing facts, and he even says that he chose Southern English because it is most familiar and observable, and therefore capable of providing him with sufficient phenomena: and he might say that what I call 'low' in his standard is only the record of a stage of progression which I happen to dislike or have not nearly observed. And yet the argument is full of fallacies: and the very position that he assumes appears to me to |
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