The financial press has become inundated with the word "austerity." Since Greece's left-wing Syriza proclaimed an "anti-austerity revolution," strong adjectives, like "incredibly savage," precede that overused word. What was once a good word has become a weaselword. That, according to the Oxford Dictionary, is "a word that destroys the force of a statement, as a weasel ruins an egg by sucking out its contents." How could that be? Well, in the hands of an unscrupulous or uninformed writer, the inversion of a perfectly good word into a weaselword is an easy task. All one has to do is leave the meaning of a word undefined or vague, rendering the word's meaning so obscure as to make it non-operational. With that, a meaningless weaselword is created. In its current usage, the word austerity is so obscure as to evoke Fritz Machlup's paraphrase of Goethe's line from Faust: To conceal ignorance, Mephistopheles counsels a student to misuse words. Such is the story and fate of austerity.
Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Austerity, A New Weaselword
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