David Crystal - How is the internet changing language today?

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Uploaded by on Jan 20, 2010

How is the internet changing language today? Global English with Professor David Crystal. Another innovative feature of Global - Macmillan's new course for adult learners of English. Visit the website www.macmillanenglish.com/global.

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  • fantastic!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!­!!!!!!!!!!

  • thanks, this helped with homework ^__^

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  • David Crystal is awesome. I have the newest edition of his Encyclopedia of Language. It's a pure joy to read.

  • I love the transcribe audio option, you get some really interesting quotes like:

    "when clinton came in in the fourteen hundreds"

    "when the intimate came into being"

    "his chart rooms as virtual world sleeveless dungeons and dragons games people play" -> I spent much of my youth with those sleeveless games!

    "you chew" -> youtube

    "you can see asians not really new punctuation yesterday to the uh... you do certainly get ...new... features of punctuation riding on the internet"

    "federal waste"

  • Wow, I'm amazed. I'd never thought that such an old person would now so much about the internet! Plus, he's absolutely right!

    LOL!

  • He said 'mediums' not 'media'. 1:58

    I like this guy.

  • thanks alot.. this helped with my assignment !!

  • Think he kinda underplays or is not aware of the depth of some slang online. On some areas of the web it's almost a dialect and pretty unintelligible to noobs.

  • The most equally international places on the web are the ones where Esperanto is spoken: search for soc.culture.esperanto, for example. Esperanto has exploded on the Net, where people rely on direct, immediate communication in a single language where all speak and contribute as equals. It's the Internet's *global* nature which has nurtured this. The more the Internet grows from its American roots, the richer its international participation, the greater need for such a quickly mastered language.

  • The most equally international places on the web are the ones where Esperanto is spoken: search for soc.culture.esperanto, or example. Esperanto has exploded on the Net, where people rely on direct, immediate communication in a single languages where all speak and contribute as equals. It's the Internet's *global* nature which has nurtured this. The more the Internet grows from its American roots, the richer its international participation, the greater need for such a quickly mastered language.

  • where did this originally come from?? i need to reference it for my work

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