The current obsession with "Gone Missing"

Laurence Horn laurence.horn at YALE.EDU
Mon Jun 8 17:27:13 UTC 2009


At 9:44 AM -0700 6/8/09, Arnold Zwicky wrote:
>On Jun 7, 2009, at 12:24 PM, John Baker wrote:
>
>>3. ... So "gone missing" was uncommon 15 years ago, somewhat more
>>common 10 years ago, and fairly common over the past five years, but
>>still far less common than "disappeared," which has a similar meaning.
>>The increase has been mostly in British and international sources,
>>which
>>mostly use British rather than American English.
>>
>>  4. Even in British sources, "gone missing" has not taken
>>over.  For example, the London Times (the timesuk database) used "gone
>>missing" 36 times in 2009, but "disappeared" 504 times.
>
>these are important points.  it's *not* that AmE has "disappear" and
>BrE has "go missing".  rather BrE has had both for some time, but the
>second variant seems to be increasing in use there.  meanwhile, the
>second variant seems to spreading in AmE, but it's very far from
>taking over there; so now some AmE speakers have both variants.
>
>it's worth asking what function might be served by having two
>variants.  Fiske and some other critics just assume that this is
>pointless variation, motivated only by fashion, but several posters
>here have teased out possible distinctions. Joel Berson picked up on
>Fiske's criticism that "go missing" is vague, suggesting that "go
>missing" allows you to talk about the change of state (from present to
>missing) without being obliged to specify the details of this change
>(a good thing if you don't in fact know the details).  that is, "go
>missing" is more general than "disappear" and other alternatives;
>"disappear", etc.  are then "go missing" plus something (the pattern,
>which i've talked about in many other contexts, is Y = X + something).
>
>variants at different levels of specificity have their uses; more
>specific is not always better than less specific.
>
>arnold
>
Good point.  The objection here is similar to one which would bar
"isn't red", which is much vaguer than the corresponding positive
specifications ("is blue", "is green", "is yellow"), yet which is
useful if you happen to know what color something isn't without
knowing what color it is.  Indeed, there have been arguments going
back centuries for eliminating negation from natural languages on the
grounds that it's uninformative.  Evidently, these arguments have not
been successful.

LH

------------------------------------------------------------
The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org



More information about the Ads-l mailing list