cellboy: (Mr Peabody and Sherman)
[personal profile] cellboy
When in elementary school, my PE teacher was also an English teacher (this contradicts the old saying, "Those that can't do teach. And those that can't teach, teach PE?")

Anyway, his pet peeve, which came up often in class, was with the word Bury, and how most of the nation pronounced it.

"It is not pronounced Berry, as in strawberry. It is pronounced Bury (burrrr-rie)", he would say.

So as I watch the news about the many people that have passed, the word "Berry" is constantly used (which annoys me). And every time it is used I think of him and the word bury vs berry. Are going to bury (burrr-ie) him in the ground, or Berry him, in jam?

So who is correct?

Date: 2009-07-08 08:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jeremytblack.livejournal.com
This is the old "descriptivist" vs. "prescriptivist" argument. Correct usage changes. Real speech is real speech and all words change and evolve. If 99% of the people are pronouncing a word a certain way, it's time for the prescriptivists to go ahead and pop that gasket in the head, have the stroke, and die because... Really? That's what you're going to be upset about?

Did you know the word "ain't", which is a word since it's been used in real language for hundreds of years, was a word before the contraction "isn't" ever came into existence? The difference is class. Lower class people used (and use) "ain't," so the people-who-will-have-strokes-early determined, from a state of denial, that it "ain't" a word.

Date: 2009-07-08 08:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cellboy.livejournal.com
Ah! Now that is interesting. Thanks!

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