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Alice: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Alice.
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Neil: And I'm Neil.
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So Alice, can you think of an example of how the English we speak is changing?
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Alice: Yes, I can.
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Teenagers saying 'like' all the time.
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Neil: Oh, that's, like, really like annoying, like?
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Alice: Well, the subject of today's show is how and why the English language is changing.
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And teenagers definitely have their own code
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including text speak when they're on the internet or using their phones.
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Fomo, bae, plos
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do you have any idea what those terms mean, Neil?
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Neil: I've got no idea what you're talking about, Alice.
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They're pretty baffling – and that means 'hard to understand'.
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But that's the idea, isn't it? We oldies aren't supposed to understand!
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Alice: Yes, exactly! Apparently, 'plos' means 'parents looking over shoulder'
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which proves your point!
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Text speak is a lot to do with inventing cool new terms – and these change quickly.
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In a year, or even six months time, words that were once popular, have disappeared completely.
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Neil: OK, I have a quiz question forming in my mind, Alice
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so I hope you're feeling up to the challenge, Alice.
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Can you tell me, what kinds of words are slow to change?
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Is it... a) nouns? b) pronouns?
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Or c) adjectives?
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Alice: I think it's a) nouns.
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The way we name things probably doesn't change that quickly.
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Neil: We shall find out if you are right or wrong later on in the show.
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But let's think about English grammar for a minute, and what changes are occurring here.
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Alice: I noticed you said 'shall' there, Neil.
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And to my ear, that sounds pretty old fashioned.
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Neil: And you're very right, Alice.
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The modal verb 'shall' is on the way out – meaning it's disappearing.
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Why do you think that is?
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Alice: Well, perhaps it's because 'will' sounds more natural these days.
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Let's listen to linguist Bas Aarts,
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talking to writer and presenter, Michael Rosen on the BBC Radio 4 programme Word of Mouth, for his explanation.
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Michael Rosen: Why would we lose 'shall'?
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I mean, if especially as we hold it in the interrogative.
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We say, you know, 'Shall we go swimming'?
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Bas Aarts: Well, because it's in competition with 'will'.
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If you have two words that more or less express the same meaning,
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one of the two is going to be pushed out of the language.
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And in this case, it's 'shall'.
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Neil: Bas Aarts there. And interrogative means 'a question'.
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So it's not just in nature that we get survival of the fittest – you know,
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the struggle for life – it happens in language too.
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Similar words are competing with each other, and some lose while others win out
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or succeed after a fight.
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Do you know of any other modal verbs that are on their way out, Alice?
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Alice: Yes – 'must' is declining rapidly.
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Neil: Why's that?
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Alice: Well... 'Must' sounds authoritarian, and people are choosing to express obligation
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or having a duty to do something – in different ways.
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Neil: OK, authoritarian means 'demanding that people obey you'.
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For example: Alice, you must move on to the next point, now!
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Alice: Oh, you scared me a bit there, Neil!
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Neil: Exactly. I can see why people are shying away from – or avoiding – 'must'.
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It sounds nicer to soften obligation by saying things like,
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'You might want to move on to the next point now, Alice.'
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Alice: OK, then, I shall.
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Let's talk about tenses.
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Progressive tenses – formed from the verb be and the suffix – ing – are usually used for ongoing situations,
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for example, 'I'm doing the show with Neil at the moment'.
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But its use has been increasing rapidly.
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Let's listen to Michael Rosen and Bas Aarts again talking about this.
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BA: It started increasing dramatically in the 19th century
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and has continued to rise in the present day.
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MR: I think that's a cue for me to say, 'I'm loving it', is that right?
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BA: Well, that is one of the constructions that is coming in,
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I mean, I sometimes call it the Big Mac progressive because of course McDonald's use that.
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Neil: In this segment of the BBC Radio 4 programme Word of Mouth,
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Michael Rosen quotes the progressive form 'I'm loving it'
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a slogan used by an American fast-food chain in its advertising campaign.
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Alice: The verb 'love' is a stative verb.
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It expresses a state of being
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as opposed to doing
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and is traditionally used in the simple form, for example, 'I love it'.
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But these days, people are using stative verbs in the progressive more and more.
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Neil: I'm hearing what you're saying, Alice!
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Now, I think it's time for the answer to today's quiz question.
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I asked you: What kinds of words are slow to change?
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Is it... a) nouns, b) pronouns or c) adjectives?
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Alice: I said a) nouns.
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Neil: And you were wrong, Alice!
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According to Professor Mark Pagel, evolutionary biologist at Reading University in the UK,
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pronouns like 'I' and 'you' and 'we' evolve slowly
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a thousand years ago we would be using similar or sometimes identical sounds.
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Similarly, number words evolve very slowly
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our ancestors were using related sounds a thousand or perhaps even two thousand years ago.
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Whereas nouns and adjectives get replaced quite rapidly
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and in five hundred years or so we'll probably be using different words to the ones we use now.
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Alice: Well, I got that completely wrong then!
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Who knew that one, two, three would have such staying power?
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Neil: I suppose numbers are pretty fundamental to our day-to-day lives
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sort of part of who we are.
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Alice: OK, let's hear the - hopefully - more permanent words we learned today.
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Neil: There were:
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baffling
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on the way out
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interrogative
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win out
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obligation
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authoritarian
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shying away from
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progressive
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stative
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Alice: Well, that's the end of today's 6 Minute English.
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To recap, we're enjoying the progressive tense.
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Neil: And we're loving 'will' and 'should', but avoiding 'shall' and 'must'.
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Don't forget to join us again soon!
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Both: Bye!