English language nears 1 million word milestone.

Adam   Thu Apr 13, 2006 4:59 pm GMT
The English language is about to reach the 1 million word milestone, according to the estimates by some experts.

Although other people say different things.

BRITISH English uses SIX TIMES as many words as French (if you believe those people who say English uses "only" 600,000 words rather than almost a million) as French uses only 100,000 words - compared with 125,000 for Russian, 200,000 for German and 225,000 for Spanish.
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English language nears the one million-word milestone
By Rupert Cornwell in Washington
Published: 13 April 2006

It will not be of much comfort to President George Bush and others who, on occasion, struggle to make themselves understood. But some time soon the English language, according to at least one reasonably authoritative source, will create its one-millionth word.

The Global Language Monitor (GLM), a San Diego-based linguistic consultancy, reckoned that on 21 March (the vernal equinox) this year, there were about 988,968 words in the language, "plus or minus a handful". At the current rate of progress, the one-million mark will be reached this summer.

And how does the GLM know? It started, it says, with a base vocabulary drawn from major dictionaries that contain the historic core of the language. Then it created its own algorithm, or formula, called the Predictive Quantities Indicator (PQI), that measures the language as found in print, electronic media, and on television and radio. That establishes a rate of increase in the creation of new words, and the import and absorption of foreign words into English.

No one argues about the huge richness of the English language - fed by Germanic, Scandinavian and Latin streams, unrivalled in its readiness to borrow from every language, and mercifully free of tiresome bodies like the Academié Française to decide what counts and what does not.

The process is only reinforced by the universality of English. True, more people (more than a billion) may be native speakers of Mandarin Chinese than of English (an estimated 500 million or so, roughly the same as Hindi). French, incidentally, only limps into the top 10 with 130 million native speakers.

But if there is such a thing as a world language, it is English, spread first by the British Empire, then by the economic, cultural and military juggernaut of the US, and now by the internet. And, at every stop on the way, new words are coined, or scooped up from other languages.

But how many and how fast? The GLM claims that its projected figures are conservative - and in fact some estimates put the total of English words at two million or more. The devil lies in definition: what constitutes a new word? Does slang count? And what about archaisms and obsolete words? Another study, the Life and Times of the English Language, by Robert Claiborne and published in 1990, puts the number of words at no more than 600,000. The latest edition of the Oxford English Dictionary contains more than 300,000 head words, and some 615,000 "word forms," that include the head words, plus combinations and derivatives. By contrast, Websters Third International Dictionary has 54,000 word families - base words, inflections and derivations.

But no one should feel intimidated. The average vocabulary of an educated native English speaker is about 24,000 to 30,000. Shakespeare used 24,000 words - 1,700 of which he is claimed to have invented.

Nonetheless, with an active vocabulary of just 3,000 or so, you can get along pretty well. And if you are stumped for a word, just make one up. It seems to have worked in the past for the most powerful man in the world, so it could work for you as well. The chances are, it will soon be swept up in the boundless net of the Global Language Monitor. You never know, it might even be the coveted number 1,000,000.

Comparing languages

* Up to 20 per cent of the words used by Global Language Monitor come from hybrids such as Chinglish and Japlish. Words from Chinglish include the business terms "drinktea", meaning closed, and "torunbusiness", meaning open. Bushisms such as "uninalienable" and 'misunderestimate' are included.

* English is evolving faster than other languages. This year's additions to the Oxford English Dictionary include "podcast" and "offshoring".

* Spanish linguists say there are 225,000 words in contemporary use.

* The largest edition of the Duden German-German dictionary contains about 200,000 words

* The Russian language has just reached the 125,000 mark.

* French has 100,000 words, one-sixth of the figure used in the UK. But the Academié Française, the body that defines the language, recognises 25,525.

news.independent.co.uk . . .
Guest   Thu Apr 13, 2006 5:06 pm GMT
pISS OFF aDAM AND TAKE YOUR SHITE WITH YOU.
Adam   Thu Apr 13, 2006 5:11 pm GMT
Why don't YOU sod off?

Or, better still, come here and say it to my face.
Jim C, Eofforwic   Thu Apr 13, 2006 5:15 pm GMT
Very interesting Adam, you're better when you stay away from international matters.
me   Thu Apr 13, 2006 5:28 pm GMT
Can you type out all 1,000,000 and post them here, Adam. Cheers!
greg   Thu Apr 13, 2006 6:23 pm GMT
Eh bien, Adam, sur ces 1 million, il faut soustraire 650.000 mots franco-latins, non ?
Tom K.   Thu Apr 13, 2006 8:03 pm GMT
Why is everyone so angry? It's totally legitimate, English-language-related news. I even went to the site and looked it up (http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article357418.ece)
Jim C, Eofforwic   Thu Apr 13, 2006 8:41 pm GMT
Adam has been a bit contraversial in the past, that is why people have reacted like this.
Damian in Edinburgh   Thu Apr 13, 2006 9:22 pm GMT
Irrefutable proof that English is about the richest and most expressive Language the world has ever seen.....the millionth word is apparently due to be coined on or around 21 March 2006....let's start taking bets on what the millionth word will be ;-) If that isn't an excuse for one blow-out of a party, then nothing is. With a vocabulary of c.3k words "you can get by pretty well"....would you ever guess we use as many as that in ordinary day to day communication in the English speaking world? In Glasgow the average is about 160 ;-) (Sorry, Craig....only joking).
L6139HI   Thu Apr 13, 2006 9:30 pm GMT
"BRITISH English uses SIX TIMES as many words as French"

I haven't the faintest idea where Adam comes up with such absurd statistics.
Guest   Thu Apr 13, 2006 9:34 pm GMT
Lets just create a new word ourself.
greg   Thu Apr 13, 2006 10:49 pm GMT
Adam : « French has 100,000 words, one-sixth of the figure used in the UK. But the Academié Française, the body that defines the language, recognises 25,525. »

Cette façon de voir les choses montre que la définition du mot « mot » est plurielle. Tout comme la construction des mots et leur entrée dans un dictionnaire, fut-il celui de lakadémié, n'est-ce pas Haddame ?
Jim C, Eofforwic   Thu Apr 13, 2006 11:55 pm GMT
Lets use a word that has previously been made up by Tommy Cooper
"Discombobulated" and just add "tron" to it.

"Discombobulateatron" = An area or situation that causes one to be Discombobulated. Lets all start using that. And that can be the millionth word
lu   Fri Apr 14, 2006 12:19 am GMT
1 million word ???
It's more and more hard to learn English.
Jim C, Eofforwic   Fri Apr 14, 2006 12:46 am GMT
I think most of them are Medical terms. People will be fine.
I love discovering new words!