George Orwell is clear that humans should use their own thought into language and outdated words should no longer be used because that is restricting understanding and creativity. As language develops with time, Orwell stresses that using “pretentious language” is just another tool for creating a false sense of sophistication, and it fails to create easy understanding of a message. Language is fluid and using outdated terminology regresses the process; a nation and society grows only if the individuals can progress with time and old phrases fails to aid that process. He also mentions that “using stale metaphors, similes, and idioms, you save much mental effort, at the cost of leaving your meaning vague, not only for your reader but for yourself.” Language is a process by which one evokes thought and expression of ideas, but when one relies upon other individual’s phrases to convey a meaning, the process of thinking is lost and only memory application exists. People think through words and if the words do not exist for that thought, humans create new words, but when people are reliant on common phrases and are not being creative with words to express a new meaning, no one is thinking anymore or developing new words. When a language is a foundation of society, the individuals in that society need to be able to think for themselves, and that is why Orwell suggests that we eliminate useless and overused phrases because they muddle the meaning and do not allow people to grow from using language. Language is important for communication, the communication needs to be clear for a concise message, and that is why it is vital for people to grow with language and use it in their own way because using old thoughts fail to grow new
George Orwell is clear that humans should use their own thought into language and outdated words should no longer be used because that is restricting understanding and creativity. As language develops with time, Orwell stresses that using “pretentious language” is just another tool for creating a false sense of sophistication, and it fails to create easy understanding of a message. Language is fluid and using outdated terminology regresses the process; a nation and society grows only if the individuals can progress with time and old phrases fails to aid that process. He also mentions that “using stale metaphors, similes, and idioms, you save much mental effort, at the cost of leaving your meaning vague, not only for your reader but for yourself.” Language is a process by which one evokes thought and expression of ideas, but when one relies upon other individual’s phrases to convey a meaning, the process of thinking is lost and only memory application exists. People think through words and if the words do not exist for that thought, humans create new words, but when people are reliant on common phrases and are not being creative with words to express a new meaning, no one is thinking anymore or developing new words. When a language is a foundation of society, the individuals in that society need to be able to think for themselves, and that is why Orwell suggests that we eliminate useless and overused phrases because they muddle the meaning and do not allow people to grow from using language. Language is important for communication, the communication needs to be clear for a concise message, and that is why it is vital for people to grow with language and use it in their own way because using old thoughts fail to grow new