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More words dying and fewer words being added to languages in digital age: study

More words dying and fewer words being added to languages in digital age: study
Word extinction. The English word 鈥淩oentgenogram鈥 derives from the Nobel prize winning scientist and discoverer of the X-ray, Wilhelm R枚ntgen (1845-1923). The prevalence of this word was quickly challenged by two main competitors, 鈥淴-ray鈥 (recorded as 鈥淴ray鈥 in the database) and 鈥淩adiogram.鈥 The arithmetic mean frequency of these three time series is relatively constant over the 80-year period 1920-2000, 〈 f 〉 ≈ 10^-7, illustrating the limited linguistic 鈥渕arket share鈥 that can be achieved by any competitor. We conjecture that the main reason 鈥淴ray鈥 has a higher frequency is due to the 鈥渇itness gain鈥 from its efficient short word length and also due to the fact that English has become the base language for scientific publication. Image (c) Scientific Reports doi:10.1038/srep00313

(糖心视频Org.com) -- Adding new words to an existing language, or dropping old ones is something people have always done. As new things or ideas are discovered, new words crop up to describe them. But now, in the digital age, that process appears to be slowing despite the increased pace of new things arriving on the scene. In a paper in Scientific Reports, a group from the Institutions Markets Technologies' Lucca Institute for Advanced Studies in Italy, describe how they have found after studying English, Spanish and Hebrew trends, that words are being dropped from languages faster and new ones added at a slower rate, than at any other time over the past three hundred years.

Suspecting that the addition of new to languages might be inhibited by modern tools such as spellcheckers, the team looked at 107 words that have been recorded by as part of its book digitizing process, which is now estimated to represent somewhere near four percent of all of the world鈥檚 books. Because they are in digital form, it is possible to perform statistical analysis on them, which is just what the team did. In doing so, they were able to note when new words appeared in a language and then to see if they held on long enough to become permanent, or if they vanished after a certain amount of time. Analyzed works included books from 1800 to 2008.

One of the most striking results the team found was that words being lost from the three languages occurred more often in the past ten to twenty years than in all of the other eras in the period of study. They also found that newer words were being added less frequently during the same period indicating that modern languages are shrinking. They suggest that electronic spellcheckers introduced during this period might be partly responsible for the change, as might the tendency to gravitate towards a smaller vocabulary when writing emails and especially when texting. They also cite the increased use of just one language, English, in science endeavors and projects, regardless of native tongue.

Interestingly, the group also found that when new words are added in the digital age, they tend to become mainstream much faster than occurred in previous years, likely because of the same modern electronic communications tools that are causing languages to constrict. They also found that it generally takes at least forty years for new words to become truly accepted as a part of a , and if that doesn鈥檛 happen, they tend to die.

More information: Statistical Laws Governing Fluctuations in Word Use from Word Birth to Word Death, Scientific Reports 2, Article number: 313

Abstract
We analyze the dynamic properties of 107 words recorded in English, Spanish and Hebrew over the period 1800鈥2008 in order to gain insight into the coevolution of language and culture. We report language independent patterns useful as benchmarks for theoretical models of language evolution. A significantly decreasing (increasing) trend in the birth (death) rate of words indicates a recent shift in the selection laws governing word use. For new words, we observe a peak in the growth-rate fluctuations around 40 years after introduction, consistent with the typical entry time into standard dictionaries and the human generational timescale. Pronounced changes in the dynamics of language during periods of war shows that word correlations, occurring across time and between words, are largely influenced by coevolutionary social, technological, and political factors. We quantify cultural memory by analyzing the long-term correlations in the use of individual words using detrended fluctuation analysis.

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Journal information: Scientific Reports

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Citation: More words dying and fewer words being added to languages in digital age: study (2012, March 19) retrieved 15 July 2025 from /news/2012-03-words-dying-added-languages-digital.html
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