Tuesday, 22 April 2008 01:41 pm

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I've read (from a dated source, mind) that our recognition vocabularies are about thrice as large as our functional vocabularies. In other words, you understand a lot more words than you ever say or write. It's pretty rare for me to think of a word that has thus far been part only of my recognition vocabulary. It's rarer still for me to think of such a word that's actually quite broadly familiar in America. But I have one such word in mind: "unforgettable."

Yes, I just used it. I've used it in quotes, especially from Nat King Cole. Doesn't count for my independent usage.

A likely reason: I hate it. Seems to me that nothing is truly unforgettable. "Memorable" is fine, but "unforgettable" implies no exceptions. My memory system doesn't have the same priorities as most. I feel embarrassed when somebody calls something "unforgettable," like the last line of Chinatown, and I've completely forgotten it. It's like failing at a foolproof method.

...
In truth, I'm not that worked up over the matter. It is trivial, like so many of my language concerns. I just thought it was worth throwing out there.
Date: Wednesday, 23 April 2008 12:49 am (UTC)

From: [identity profile] nefaria.livejournal.com
I'm getting that impression from the latest Steven R. Donaldson novel. It seems like in every sentence, he's using words that will never, ever come out of my mouth, like "puissance". I know what the words mean, but I generally don't speak a word unless I'm fairly certain my audience will know what it means, so that limits my speaking vocabulary to a considerable extent.

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Stephen Gilberg

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