Monday, August 14, 2023

Playing it by the ear!

 “I've come up with a set of rules that describe our reactions to technologies:

1. Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works.

2. Anything that's invented between when you’re fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it.

3. Anything invented after you're thirty-five is against the natural order of things.”

― Douglas Adams, The Salmon of Doubt

 

In eighth or ninth standard, we had an essay by R.K. Narayan called "Toasted English". He 'roasts' - in modern terminology - the gimmicks and contrivances that Americans have reduced their vocabulary of English words into. He even starts from the word "Yeah" and says how it cannot be used to address a person, as in "Yeah sir" or "Yeah darling".

 

I might not have had clearly formed ideas, but my general feeling was that this uncle – albeit an accomplished English author uncle – had a problem with such English usages 30 or 40 years ago, but they seem fine to me today! And I dismissed it with that "these old people!" kind of a sentiment. Did I dismiss it though? I don't seem to have done so because I remember it to this day, 40 years later! Clearly it must have struck a chord somewhere, as I ended up being an ultra-pedantic grammar Nazi myself!

 

Surely, what DNA says about technology in the above quote is also true about language usage, irrespective of the language in question! I myself (Yeah, I know! I’m only using the reflexive pronoun for emphasis!) used rebellious new terms while in college, which my parents and aunts disapproved of, while today, I turn up my nose against SMS lingo or seemingly dumbed down GenZ usages, which are high-key sus AF that I would like to yeet them out of the window, no cap!

 

“Basis” is my new pet-peeve. “Basis your assessment, we are taking the candidate through to the next round”. Cue uncontrollable gnashing of my teeth and a gargantuan urge to take the marker to the whiteboard for an impromptu English lecture. I will come to “impromptu” soon.

 

Did older people react the same way when everyone started using “cue” the way I have used it above? Should I have said, “That is my cue to uncontrollably gnashing my teeth…”, instead?

 

I cringe each time I hear “Basis” used in this manner. It should be either “On the basis of…” or “Based on…” not just “Basis”, surely!

 

But I have now heard it being used by, not only Indians and Germans, whom I regularly work with but also Americans, and – inexplicably, to me – Britishers. I must now reconcile to the fact that all the new-fangled MBA types will continue to say, “Basis this audit report …” and I will continue to wince in grammatical agony.

 

Another word, which is not a matter of usage or opinion, but simply wrongly used, is “improvise”. There is no forgiveness in heaven or earth for this.

 

“There are a few open bugs, but we will improvise the software in the next version”. What?! Here we are with a full-fledged Product Manager, Program Manager, processes for design, development, unit, integration and system test cycles and so much time and money spent into automation; and we are talking about improvising the software”!

 

Here I haven’t been able to hold back. There is no end to the number of times I have individually and collectively lectured people on this word, but I don’t think anyone understands. They just give me an incredulous "Ok boomer uncle!" look and move on with their life, improvising everything!


OED says:
Improve:

to become better than before; to make something/somebody better than before.

Improvise:

to make or do something using whatever is available, usually because you do not have what you really need There isn't much equipment. We're going to have to improvise.

 

Such is the life of the pedant. Nowadays, if you say it out too many times, you get to hear about how we should embrace people from various backgrounds and how English is not everyone’s first language and we should respect that diversity, etc. So will I be shut up and so will nobody improvise improve.