They say "serviette" in Canada, but only (I believe) in reference to a
paper napkin.

On 4/25/07, Michael Perelman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Everyone wants to be sophisticated, but only the rich can decide what 
constitutes
sophistication. Rich people are stylish, but designers for the rich scour the 
haunts
of the poor to find inspiration for new styles. What follows suggests that the 
rich
can even decide what words to use & when the non-rich catch on, the rich change 
the
rules again.
Lyall, Sarah. 2007. "Why Can.t the English Just Give Up That Class Folderol?" 
New
York Times (26 April).
"Nancy Mitford.s famous list of .U. and .non-U. words -- the .U. refers to upper
class -- in 1954 was both a frivolity, as she considered it, and a more or less
accurate reflection of the customs of the time. The upper classes generally did 
say
.sofa,. .rich. and .jam,. as Mitford wrote, and not .settee,. .wealthy. and
.preserves"..
"Many of her .non-U. words had been adopted in the Victorian era by lower-class
people striving to seem refined, said John E. Joseph, a professor of applied
linguistics at Edinburgh University.  These included words with French origins 
--
serviette. for napkin, for instance, and .toilet,. which came from .toilette.. 
The
upper class shunned the words as arriviste affectations."



--
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com



--
Sandwichman

Reply via email to