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Forums > General Discussion > Has Slang/rap Vernacular Taken Over The English Language?
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Thread started 02/27/09 1:16pm

MRGee

Has Slang/rap Vernacular Taken Over The English Language?

and do you think it cheapins one's worth?
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Reply #1 posted 02/27/09 1:53pm

rnljs

MRGee said:

and do you think it cheapins one's worth?

I am constantly correcting my kids. I don't mind so much if they use it with their friends, but I do think it sounds less than intelligent in regular conversation. It is so informal and I am afraid they will slip in a job interview or with a teacher and say something that is disrepectful. Communication skills are so important.
Peace. Love. Prince
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Reply #2 posted 02/27/09 2:09pm

hokie

rnljs said:

MRGee said:

and do you think it cheapins one's worth?

I am constantly correcting my kids. I don't mind so much if they use it with their friends, but I do think it sounds less than intelligent in regular conversation. It is so informal and I am afraid they will slip in a job interview or with a teacher and say something that is disrepectful. Communication skills are so important.



My public speaking instructor told one of the younger (18 yr. old) students that her "mall speak" was highly annoying and that she needed to change it so she wouldn't sound so stupid.

Ouch.

lol
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Reply #3 posted 02/27/09 3:30pm

namepeace

Only if it is spoken exclusively, presumably by the kids/young adults. If so, it is a failing of parents and schools, who admittedly are battling a swarming media culture that has made hip-hop a basic marketing commodity.
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #4 posted 02/28/09 6:25pm

JayJai

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Wat I hate to hear is "like" after every 3 words and phrases that makes no common sense:
"I was thinkin like.....i dunno.....maybe we can like go hang out at your place?"

WTF is "I dunno" doin there? U DO know, so then wat de ass is "i dunno" suppose to mean there? and "like"...my gosh! disbelief
I can't have conversation with someone who speaks that way.
Freekin annoyin.
[Edited 2/28/09 18:26pm]
I swear the words "HATER" is wayyy over-rated...smh
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Reply #5 posted 02/28/09 6:33pm

ThreadBare

All slang doesn't come from rap. Do you have a visceral dislike for rap? It seems to come up a lot.

Language changes. Even the "barbarians at the gate" have to budge on the issues of splitting infinitives and other occurrences that signal to some purists the devolution of the language.

As for pop culture's impact on language, that's nothing new. I'd say, if anything, texting has sped up the changing of English more than rap culture, in a far quicker time frame.
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Reply #6 posted 02/28/09 7:07pm

meow85

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Perhaps in some circles, but not for all of society.

Besides, language is a constantly evolving thing. It doesn't exist in a stasis. Even within my lifetime there have been HUGE shifts in standard English and how we use it. Using nouns as verbs comes to mind, i.e. googling.
[Edited 3/1/09 2:35am]
"A Watcher scoffs at gravity!"
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Reply #7 posted 02/28/09 8:10pm

Mysterioso

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This sig is just a fig of your imago-neigh-shun
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Reply #8 posted 02/28/09 9:08pm

Fauxie

No, it hasn't.
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Reply #9 posted 02/28/09 9:24pm

purplesweat

MRGee said:

and do you think it cheapins one's worth?


I think it's done damage to your English skills...
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Reply #10 posted 03/01/09 6:58am

JayJai

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purplesweat said:

MRGee said:

and do you think it cheapins one's worth?


I think it's done damage to your English skills...


spit
I swear the words "HATER" is wayyy over-rated...smh
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Reply #11 posted 03/01/09 7:14am

GNS

No. Bad grammar and spelling have.
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