Introducing English Linguistics



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(Cambridge introductions to language and linguistics) Charles F. Meyer-Intr

grammaticality
and  accept-
ability
.
A sentence is grammatical if its structure conforms to a rule of
grammar. Thus, of the four sentences below, (a)–(c) are grammatical; only
(d) is ungrammatical:
(a) I don’t have any money
(b) I have no money.
(c) I ain’t got no money.
(d) *Have I don’t money any.
Sentences (a) and (b) conform to rules governing the placement of nega-
tives in sentences: the negative can be placed either after the auxiliary (do
in a) and optionally contracted with it, or before a noun phrase if the
noun phrase contains a word such as any (as in b). Although sentences
such as (c) containing ain’t and double negation are often characterized 
as ungrammatical, they are actually grammatical: ain’t now serves as a
general marker of negation in English, and copying the negative (rather
The study of language
11


than simply moving it), creating an instance of multiple negation, is a
grammatical process dating back to Old English. Objections to sentences
such as (c) are more a matter of acceptability, not grammaticality. Only (d)
is truly ungrammatical because the placement of words in this sentence
violates rules of English word order (e.g. words such as any always come
before nouns, not after them).
Acceptability judgments will vary from speaker to speaker and reflect
the fact that we all have opinions about what we see as good and bad uses
of language. Because ain’t is a highly stigmatized word, many people will
react very negatively to its usage, judging it as highly unacceptable in any
context. Despite this attitude, ain’t is still widely used, and those using it
obviously find it acceptable, at least in some contexts. For instance, ain’t
occurs quite commonly in song lyrics: “You ain’t nothin’ but a hound dog,”
“Ain’t that a shame,” “There ain’t no mountain high enough, Ain’t no val-
ley low enough, Ain’t no river wide enough.” One could hardly imagine
these lyrics being changed: “You aren’t anything but a hound dog.” The dis-
tinction between grammaticality and acceptability is important because
these notions describe what is possible in language versus what we prefer
or do not prefer.
The popular tendency to confuse grammaticality and acceptability illus-
trates a significant difference between what the general public feels about
language and what the average linguist does. This ideological divide is the
product of two very different belief systems, with linguists firmly com-
mitted to the scientific study of language and non-linguists typically pre-
ferring a much more subjective approach. The differences between these
two very different ideologies are illustrated in the quotes below, both of
which deal with the subject of language change.
The first quote is from an interview with John Simon, author of a book
on English usage entitled Paradigms Lost and a former theater critic for New
York Magazine. Simon was asked to give his views on language change and
the current state of the language:
Well it [the violation of rules of syntax and grammar] has gotten worse. It’s
been my experience that there is no bottom, one can always sink lower, and
that the language can always disintegrate further ... [The current state of
the language is] Unhealthy, poor, sad, depressing, um, and probably fairly
hopeless ... the descriptive linguists are a curse upon their race, uh who uh
of course think that what the people say is the law. And by that they mean
the majority, they mean the uneducated. I think a society which the unedu-
cated lead the educated by the nose is not a good society ... I mean maybe
[language] change is inevitable, maybe, maybe dying from cancer is also
inevitable but I don’t think we should help it along.
Excerpted from “Do You Speak American,” which was narrated 
by Robert McNeil and originally broadcast on PBS, 
January 6, 2005

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