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 valex

link 9.02.2009 18:08 
Subject: OFF: Grammar and Politics
1. Grammar and Politics
This Steven Pinker piece is currently the most e-mailed
article on the entire NYT website. It discusses what actually happened
during the oath and offers an eloquent defense of the split-infinitive.
Oaf of Office
By STEVEN PINKER
IN 1969, Neil Armstrong appeared to have omitted an indefinite article
as he stepped onto the moon and left earthlings puzzled over the
difference between "man" and "mankind." In 1980, Jimmy Carter, accepting
his party's nomination, paid homage to a former vice president he called
Hubert Horatio Hornblower. A year later, Diana Spencer reversed the
first two names of her betrothed in her wedding vows, and thus, as
Prince Charles Philip supposedly later joked, actually married his
father.
On Tuesday, Chief Justice John Roberts joined the Flubber Hall of Fame
when he administered the presidential oath of office apparently without
notes. Instead of having Barack Obama "solemnly swear that I will
faithfully execute the office of president of the United States," Chief
Justice Roberts had him "solemnly swear that I will execute the office
of president to the United States faithfully." When Mr. Obama paused
after "execute," the chief justice prompted him to continue with
"faithfully the office of president of the United States." (To ensure
that the president was properly sworn in, the chief justice
re-administered the oath Wednesday evening.)
How could a famous stickler for grammar have bungled that 35-word
passage, among the best-known words in the Constitution? Conspiracy
theorists and connoisseurs of Freudian slips have surmised that it was
unconscious retaliation for Senator Obama's vote against the chief
justice's confirmation in 2005. But a simpler explanation is that the
wayward adverb in the passage is blowback from Chief Justice Roberts's
habit of grammatical niggling.
Language pedants hew to an oral tradition of shibboleths that have no
basis in logic or style, that have been defied by great writers for
centuries, and that have been disavowed by every thoughtful usage
manual. Nonetheless, they refuse to go away, perpetuated by the Gotcha!
Gang and meekly obeyed by insecure writers.
Among these fetishes is the prohibition against "split verbs," in which
an adverb comes between an infinitive marker like "to," or an auxiliary
like "will," and the main verb of the sentence. According to this
superstition, Captain Kirk made a grammatical error when he declared
that the five-year mission of the starship Enterprise was "to boldly go
where no man has gone before"; it should have been "to go boldly."
Likewise, Dolly Parton should not have declared that "I will always love
you" but "I always will love you" or "I will love you always."
Any speaker who has not been brainwashed by the split-verb myth can
sense that these corrections go against the rhythm and logic of English
phrasing. The myth originated centuries ago in a thick-witted analogy to
Latin, in which it is impossible to split an infinitive because it
consists of a single word, like dicere, "to say." But in English,
infinitives like "to go" and future-tense forms like "will go" are two
words, not one, and there is not the slightest reason to interdict
adverbs from the position between them.
Though the ungrammaticality of split verbs is an urban legend, it found
its way into The Texas Law Review Manual on Style, which is the arbiter
of usage for many law review journals. James Lindgren, a critic of the
manual, has found that many lawyers have "internalized the bogus rule so
that they actually believe that a split verb should be avoided," adding,
"The Invasion of the Body Snatchers has succeeded so well that many can
no longer distinguish alien speech from native speech."
In his legal opinions, Chief Justice Roberts has altered quotations to
conform to his notions of grammaticality, as when he excised the "ain't"
from Bob Dylan's line "When you ain't got nothing, you got nothing to
lose." On Tuesday his inner copy editor overrode any instincts toward
strict constructionism and unilaterally amended the Constitution by
moving the adverb "faithfully" away from the verb.
President Obama, whose attention to language is obvious in his speeches
and writings, smiled at the chief justice's hypercorrection, then gamely
repeated it. Let's hope that during the next four years he will always
challenge dogma and boldly lead the nation in new directions.
Steven Pinker is a psychology professor at Harvard and the chairman of
the usage panel of The American Heritage Dictionary. Copyright 2009 The
New York Times Company

 lisulya

link 9.02.2009 20:39 
'tis not what we say that matters, it's what we DO... politicians more so than others.... ))

 c_khrytch

link 10.02.2009 1:08 
ещё Штирлиц:: Политика и порядчность - нсовместимы.

 

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