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Authors: Rosemarie Ostler

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Gove was an unlikely candidate for linguistic radicalism. Like Noah Webster, he descended from a long line of respectable New Englanders. He was born in New Hampshire in 1902 and grew up there. At the age of sixteen Gove enrolled in Dartmouth College, majoring in English. As some reviewers later noticed, his own usage was exemplary. Gove's 1946 letter of application to Merriam reveals that he was one of a small minority of Americans in the 1940s who bothered to make the distinction between first person
shall
/
should
and second and third person
will
/
would
. The letter opens with the sentence, “I should like to know whether there is an opportunity for me to go to work for your company.” Even Strunk and White could not have asked for a more meticulous style. Nonetheless, as a dictionary editor, he accepted other speaking styles as equally valid.
13

After earning a master's degree at Harvard, Gove began a career as a college teacher that included fifteen years of directing the freshman English program at New York University. At the same time he worked toward, and eventually gained, a Ph.D. in English literature at Columbia. He spent several years collecting material on the great lexicographer Samuel Johnson before ultimately deciding to write his dissertation on the topic of imaginary voyages in literature.

With the start of World War II, Gove joined the navy. When he returned to civilian life after the war, he began to contemplate a career change away from teaching. One of the companies he queried was Merriam. Although his years of research on Johnson didn't result in a dissertation, he had learned quite a bit about the process of crafting a dictionary. Merriam hired Gove in 1946 as an assistant editor. Five years later, the company asked him to take on the task of overseeing the third edition of their unabridged dictionary.

Gove's idea that the dictionary should act as a faithful recorder of actual usage is not much different from Webster's often repeated maxim that grammar books and dictionaries should be based on the language, not the other way around, but Webster's dictionary was by this time very different from his original book. By 1951, all radical notions about language use had long since been expunged from its pages. The dictionary had grown into a bastion of conventional American speech and Gove's point of view now appeared to be an abrupt break with tradition.

*   *   *

As the controversy over the new dictionary gathered steam, the Merriam Company—astounded at first by the outpouring of disapproval—belatedly decided that a response was in order. A starchy letter from Gove appeared in the November 5
New York Times.
He expresses astonishment at the slangy opening of the paper's recent editorial, “in which you pounce on nine words out of 450,000 to announce that we have been confabbing and yakking … to finalize a new dictionary.” He continues, “The paragraph is, of course, a monstrosity.… It hits no mark at all. A similar monstrosity could be contrived by jumbling together inappropriate words from formal literary language, or from the Second Edition.”

Gove argues that the dictionary is merely doing its job of reflecting real American usage. The much maligned
finalize,
which had drawn scandalized comments when President Eisenhower used it a few years earlier, “turns up all over the English-speaking world” beginning in the 1920s. President Kennedy had used it only recently. It even turns up occasionally in the pages of the
Times.
Gove notes that
The New York Times
has in fact contributed several hundred quotations to
Webster's Third.
That's one of the ways the dictionary's compilers keep up with current usage.

Gove assures the
Times
editor, “We plan to continue reading and marking The Times as the number one exhibit of good standard contemporary cultivated English,” even if the
Times
management urges its staff writers to continue relying on
Webster's Second.
He feels, however, that “the ultimate arbiters of our linguistic standards should not be urged to look back to artificial precepts of a bygone age. They must accept linguistic facts.” He finishes by pointing out, “Whether you or I … like it or not, the contemporary English language of the Nineteen Sixties … is not the language of the Nineteen Twenties and Thirties.”
14

Gove makes some of the same points in a much shorter letter responding to the negative review in
Life
magazine
.
He notes that
irregardless,
which
Life
has stigmatized as a “monstrous non-word,” also appeared in
Webster's Second.
Moreover,
Webster's Third
marks it as nonstandard. Other words from the third edition that
Life
condemns are likewise found in earlier editions. Gove then reiterates his position that the purpose of a dictionary is to record the language as it exists. “For us to attempt to prescribe the language,” he says, “would be like
Life
reporting the news as its editors would prefer it to happen.”

The
Life
editors were apparently unimpressed with this response. They appended a note to the letter, explaining that they didn't intend to give the impression that
irregardless
and the other words mentioned were not in
Webster's Second.
The point of their complaint is that the second edition labels the word “erroneous and humorous,” while Gove's edition has upgraded it to merely “nonstandard.” They feel that “Editor Gove is saying that if a word is misused often enough, it becomes acceptable.”
15

Gove and the
Life
editors were shouting across the same gulf that had divided linguistic radicals and conservatives since the late eighteenth century. As always, neither side was prepared to budge an inch. Philip Gove believed in actual use and the editors of
Life
believed in the rules, and no amount of arguing could change that. Like linguists and verbal critics in the 1870s, the two sides were making vastly different assumptions about language use and grammar. Descriptivists thought attempts to pervert the processes of language change were not only absurd, but useless. Those in favor of prescribed rules believed that standards could and should be imposed.

Others besides Gove came to the defense of the dictionary. Most were linguists or lexicographers, but not all. Roy H. Copperud, a journalist who would later write a book on American usage and style, was one who swam against the negative tide. In an
Editor & Publisher
column, he remarks on the “flurry of nitwitted commentary” stirred up by the publication of
Webster's Third.
He says, “They whine that the new dictionary is guilty of ‘permissiveness,' reflecting the wrong-headed, though widely held … conviction that the business of a dictionary is to lay down the law.” He adds, “Twenty minutes spent on the conclusions of any reputable linguist in the last 25 years should convince even the most obtuse that the business of a dictionary is to report how words are used, and not to prescribe or proscribe meanings.” Copperud admits to personal prejudices against certain words, for instance,
finalize.
He knows, however, that it would be “both stupid and futile” for the dictionary to try to outlaw them.

Copperud also comments approvingly on some of the changes that other reviewers attacked. He thinks it's sensible of the editors to leave out encyclopedia-type material to make room for tens of thousands of new words. He finds the new pronunciation symbols baffling, but assumes that users will get accustomed to them eventually. “In general,” he summarizes, “it may be said that this dictionary aims at representing English as it is used by the literate majority in this country.”
16

A handful of other reviews also support the aims and general organization of the dictionary. A brief jokey comment in
America
starts out sarcastically, “To the barricades! Man the breastworks! The dignity of the English language, at least as she is spoke by us Amuricans, is being assaulted.” The editor then explains to the many reviewers who are apparently confused that the dictionary “does not
make
language; it records language's use.” The St. Louis
Post Dispatch
also comments that the
Times
seems to have “an egregious misconception of what the purpose of a dictionary is.” The
Reporter,
laughing at those who cling to
Webster's Second,
questions why they don't go back even further in time. After all, dictionaries of the English language have been in existence for several hundred years.
17

Lexicographer Bergen Evans was a vocal champion of the new dictionary. Several months after Follett's savage attack, the
Atlantic
published a rejoinder by Evans. Evans also tackles the question of what purpose a dictionary is supposed to serve. In answering it, he takes on the major criticisms that have been leveled at
Webster's Third.
To begin with, he says, a dictionary is concerned with words. If the enormous increase in American vocabulary over the past three decades has compelled the editors of the dictionary to throw out the names of Greek gods, the table of weights and measures, and other extraneous information, so be it.

As for what has changed or been added, Evans reminds his readers of a basic principle of modern linguistics—correctness can only rest on usage, and usage is relative. Usage has changed enormously between 1934 and 1961. Any dictionary that didn't reflect this fact would not be doing its job. The very newspapers and magazines that have attacked
Webster's Third
include “pages that would appear, to the purist of forty years ago, unbuttoned gibberish.” The issue of the
Times
in which the editors declare their loyalty to
Webster's Second
uses, by Evans's count, no fewer than 153 words and constructions not listed in that revered tome, as well as nineteen that were listed, but marked as nonstandard.
18

It is not the responsibility of dictionaries to confirm our prejudices, argues Evans. They can't pretend that certain usages or pronunciations don't exist because we find them distasteful. Evans considers
finalize,
which has been singled out for condemnation more than any word except
ain't.
He believes that
Webster's Third
has handled the word in the only way possible. To omit a word that has been common for two generations—that has been used by two presidents and a secretary-general of the United Nations—would be the true abrogation of the lexicographer's duty. Nor should the word be marked as substandard. “President Kennedy and U Thant are highly educated men,” he points out, “and both are articulate and literate.”
Finalize
is not even a freak form. It was created through the same linguistic process that gave the language
formalize, verbalize, standardize,
and many other
–ize
words.
19

“Standard,” says Evans, is a slippery concept, because “words are continually shifting their meanings and connotations and hence their status.” People who have been used to considering a certain word or grammatical structure substandard, who then begin to hear and read it everywhere, will no doubt be distressed to finally look up the word and discover that it's listed in the dictionary with no indication that it's less than respectable. Changes of this type seem to happen rapidly in the twentieth century, “but it is no more the dictionary's business to oppose this process than to speed it up.”

Evans concedes that the dictionary is not perfect. People may reasonably argue that some proper names should have been retained or that the new method of defining words has some disadvantages. One thing is certain though, he concludes roundly—“Anyone who solemnly announces in 1962 that he will be guided in matters of English usage by a dictionary published in 1934 is talking ignorant and pretentious nonsense.”
20

Evans was one of the few who drew parallels between Gove's tribulations and Noah Webster's. In a lively article for
The New York Times Magazine,
he recounts the contempt that greeted Webster's 1806 dictionary, with its odd spellings and colloquial Americanisms. He quotes the
Boston Palladium,
calling Webster's dictionary “superfluous, as we already possess the admirable lexicon of Johnson.” Then he remarks in an aside, “(As we say today: ‘Don't throw away your Second International!')” Webster, too, he points out, was attacked for including vulgar new words such as
advisory, presidential,
and
insubordination.
He informs readers, “
Demoralize, Americanize
and
deputize,
by the way, caused as much agitation in 1806 as
finalize
was to cause 156 years later.”
21
Not much had changed in the world of usage criticism.

*   *   *

Months after its release, the uproar over
Webster's Third
raged unabated. In March 1962
New Yorker
staff writer Dwight MacDonald wrote one of the most comprehensive reviews of the book, and probably the nastiest. Because the review is detailed, and even offers a few measured words of praise, it comes off as thoughtful, making the total effect all the more devastating. MacDonald got many of his facts wrong, as various responders pointed out. However, none of the rebuttals had the wide distribution or powerful impact of the review itself. Decades later, opponents of the dictionary would still be quoting it to make their case.

MacDonald starts with a sweeping condemnation of the dictionary editors' methods. “This scientific revolution,” he pronounces, “has meshed gears with a trend toward permissiveness, in the name of democracy, that is debasing our language by rendering it less precise and thus less effective as literature and less effective as communication.”
22
He prefers the “forthright” labels of the second edition—
colloquial, erroneous, incorrect, illiterate
—to the “fuzzier”
nonstandard
and
substandard.
He of course fulminates against
ain't,
blaming the word's wishy-washy labeling on Gove's structural linguistics tendencies.

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