Have you noticed the proliferation of the word "unalive" on the 'net as a substitute for "kill" or "die"? It's not just a fad- there's a reason behind it.
When you tell people they cannot say certain words, they will come up with new words that say the same thing. It's always been this way, which is why we say "golly" or "gee" instead of something that could be considered blasphemous. These polite terms evolved slowly enough that everyone knows how to use them. But in the internet age, the administrators of popular platforms (TikTok in this case) can make their own rules about what words are allowed. Users then find substitutes, or make up new words like "unalive," but those terms are complete nonsense to people who don't use that platform. Five years on, I had no idea that "panini" means "pandemic," because why would that word be banned? Linguist Dr. Erica Brozovsky explains why internet language has become this incomprehensible.
Saturday, July 26, 2025
Linguistic Self-Censorship
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
My wife teaches special ed which saw the terms idiot, imbecile, and moron become retarded which became "special." Crippled to handicapped. Spastic to CP (cerebral palsy).
Wait until you see what they have done with the asterisk, it'll b**w y**r co**on s*cks r*ght f***ing *ff
Annoys me though, because they make you say the words in your head while they, these invisible self censoring wallys, leave themselves looking all pure and innocent.
Pure deception
God forbid we be able to talk about important subjects directly, using plain vocabulary.
Post a Comment