Can A Decent Man Achieve Success In This...
Society & Culture21 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by delboy3. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Why do people get so worked up about changes to language over time? A language lives and is not, contrary to the belief of some of the linguistic pedants on here, set in stone. That is why dictionaries are updated, we don't all write like Shakespeare, blah blah blah.
Upholders of lingistic purity almost always fail! So if the majority of the population see the need to say "He went" instead of "He said", let them. "He went" isn't a new thing, by the way - it's been around for years. Who knows, if it really catches on it might be the norm in 20 years.
And then people will be harping on about changes to the language and saying, "Why don't people say "He went" anymore". See?
well said doofah, and your theory about this way of talking being used only face-to-face makes sense. Language does change all the time, but there is almost always a reason for it, whether it's to make a fine distinction from other usages, or by analogy with older words (notice how 'under way' is becoming one word, probably by analogy with undertake or motorway or something?), to describe something new (eg computer features) or just to create a code that excludes other listeners (eg much teenage slang).
As I said yesterday, this 'I went' usage has been around for 50 years to my personal knowledge, probably more, and I don't think it's particularly American at all.
"Yeah but no but" is a phrase used by a sterotyped teenage girl in Little Britain (comedy programme). This is probably why it seems to be about a lot.
And by the way I agree, spoken language has far differing characteristics to written language and we should just go with the flow, man. My personal "yeah but no but" is the "I'm like..." etc etc. I blame the kids (I'm a teacher!).