29 November 2005

SMSin

They say, it doesn’t make sense to pick up a pen to write when you haven’t yet stood up to live, but what to do… there are so many things to be told hehe… don’t worry… just njoy readin…

They say text messaging or smsing ruins our language… but hey hold your horses. First, let’s answer a few questions before we go into The-Argument.

How did humans first communicate?? Signals, for screaming out loud!! Then the next question… How did they communicate when they weren’t face to face? With the help of figures and pictures. (Well it seems this sentence is not grammatically correct as per MS-Word – but it seems you understood it pretty well – so I care a damn!!). Then the language was brought into picture in order to allow people to communicate with utmost ease.

Well now comes the million dollar question… Does smsing ruin our language? Well for starters… if language wasn’t meant to simplify our lives, why was it invented? Ok, here I go breaking one more foremost rule in the art of conversation… that of answering a question with another question. In our defense, smsing improves communication and that I believe is the main aim of a language. Therefore, as long as we have the right aim and the right direction, we dnt hv to wrry!! So people njoy smsin… hehe!

1 comment:

Mahesh Bhat said...

Language to communicate is what I agree with you. And what is wrong with SMS?

I do not find anything inherently Satanic with the use of SMS, but it is only when they happen to make way into literature I would raise an alarm.

I understand the shortcomings of mobile phones and the 'SMS-language' is a very good improvisation sought by its users. (I do tend to avoid it though, and my friends easily identify a message to come from me before even they see the number). As I said, when this seeps into the general literature, then we need to worry where we are actually heading.

A word is spelt the way it is spelt for many reasons. There is a good lineage to every word and that contributes to its meaning. Every word has a history of its own, and that when spelt the way it is, gives the depth to the literature.

Come to think of it, I hate for English to be a language spoken, read and written by many. I would have preferred any other phonetic language, maybe German or maybe Sanskrit. But even in these cases, the value of properly spelt words remain.