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Conveying Emphasis

By JOHN McWHORTER | August 31, 2007

Walking the streets of New York , nothing cheers me up like signs written under the impression that quotation marks convey emphasis. One of my favorites is a cleaners that advertises its "FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY" as if there's something hypothetical about the service.

Or, another shop has "DROP OFF YOUR LAUNDRY ON YOUR WAY TO WORK, ‘PICK IT UP ON YOUR WAY BACK HOME.'" Then there's one I used to pass every day, a candy store telling us that "WHEN IT COME TO NUTS, CHOCOLATES AND CANDIES, WE ARE THE BEST." Call it the new boldface.

The grammar of that last one reflects that most of these shops are run by immigrants, who often have limited knowledge of English, especially the nuances of English as it is written. Native-born Americans are hardly strangers to the new boldface, either, in which case it seems to be related to educational level.

It is an understandable mistake. Quotations set off something, and it's a short step from setting something off to emphasizing it. For someone who has never read much, at least in English, it's natural to suppose that quotation marks are highlighters, since in a way, they are.

Thus I can wrap my head around why someone would advertise their restaurant as serving "FINE FOOD." There are now legions of people who have an alternate conception of what quotation marks are used for, using it with considerable consistency — notice people do not use them in place of hyphens or semicolons.

However, fans of books like "Eats, Shoots and Leaves" have nothing to fear. There is no reason to suppose that America is on its way to no one knowing the difference between quotation marks and emphasis.

Written language is more resistant to change than spoken language. At all times there are all kinds of things going on in spoken language and in less formal written language which leave standard written English sailing serenely along untouched. Even standard English is used less formally today than it was back in the old days, but there are still limits. Notice how many people say That's a whole nother issue , and how we rarely if ever encounter "whole nother" in print, except if a person is quoted. There is also no significant relationship between how people write e-mails and the prose of the Wall Street Journal or even Tiger Beat.

Which means that the new boldface will just hang around as an underground alternative punctuation. New generations of immigrants will pick it up from older ones' signs, and there will always be native-born Americans who use it this way. The standard written language, however, will not take it up.

Of course to many, the new boldface is simply "wrong." However, as a linguist I have a deep-seated skepticism toward much of what we are taught and think it is so conclusively "wrong" in the way we speak and write.

I value graceful expression as much as anyone. What gets ticklish for me are claims that it is, for example, "wrong" to use impact as a verb. Quite simply, the verbs view, silence, worship, copy, and outlaw all began as nouns. No one has a problem with them.

Thus wearing my linguist hat, I am inclined to treat the new boldface as a variant usage of punctuation which, since it is used consistently by users, cannot on any logical grounds be rejected as "wrong."

After all, just as nouns are always becoming verbs in English, even the uses of punctuation change, and I don't mean across vast expanses of time such as that which separates us from Shakespeare. A hundred years ago in America it was considered good style on signs to put a period after nouns used alone. Across the street from me, the facing on a house was removed and revealed an antique sign that read PATTERN MAKERS. although "pattern makers" is not a sentence. You commonly see periods used this way in photos of the era.

So apparently the usage of quotation marks is different now than back then just as with periods. This is my arid intellectual take on it. More viscerally, however, I have come to accept the new boldface just as much for how much it makes me laugh after a long day. My life would be poorer if a laundromat in my neighborhood did not display a bracingly skeptical sense of its own existence with its sign "CAROLINA'S."

Indeed, the new boldface can be a vehicle of considerable philosophical nuance. I am still trying to figure out what one of my favorite signs, regretfully no longer extant, meant by advertising its salad bar with CREATE "A" SALAD.

Mr. McWhorter is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.


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Mr. McWhorter correctly observes that a somewhat odd and semi-literate use of quotation marks seems to be spreading across the... [MORE]

richard beck 

Sep 4, 2007 08:44

Most language is imitative, not rationally learned. Three possible inspirations for this usage: (1) Movies and books are often promoted with... [MORE]

carolyn wolff 

Sep 11, 2007 09:24

I've puzzled over this for decades, ever since I saw a sign in a Colorado cafe that said "Watch your... [MORE]

Bill Marvel 

Sep 11, 2007 09:33

I agree that written and spoken language change - otherwise we'd all be able to read past writings like Chaucer... [MORE]

Harry Shannon 

Sep 11, 2007 12:22

This non-standard use of quotation marks reminds me of the consistent use of something like French on Midwestern menus. I've... [MORE]

Larry ten Harmsel 

Sep 11, 2007 09:23

"Thus I can wrap my head around why someone would advertise their restaurant..."

Is this a case of a descriptive linguist... [MORE]

Christopher Thomas 

Sep 11, 2007 10:21

There used to be a sign above the entrance to a Chinese restaurant in the suburban community where I lived:... [MORE]

judy kinney 

Sep 13, 2007 13:43

Fascinating! Why not set out on a course to write about as many misuses of our language and grammar as... [MORE]

Bob Neal 

Sep 11, 2007 11:48

How helpful of the Sun to hyperlink America, Shakespeare, and the Wall Street Journal. Those terms might need explanation to... [MORE]

Tess Tosterone 

Sep 11, 2007 12:12

There are now legions of people who have an alternate conception of what quotation marks are used for, using it... [MORE]

Sharni Jayawardena 

Sep 11, 2007 13:56

Now I know what the signs mean when I see "'No' Parking - 'Don't even think about it!!!'", and "'No'... [MORE]

Fred Nicol 

Sep 11, 2007 15:25

Quotation marks have long been misused and maligned. As a teenager in the 1970s, I used to walk home from... [MORE]

John Moore 

Sep 11, 2007 15:31

This use of quotes is old. I've seen them on menus and pizza boxes all my life. Oftentimes they CAN... [MORE]

Bob Byrne 

Sep 11, 2007 17:43

Are the quotation marks around Eat, Shoots, and Leaves tounge in cheek? Shouldn't book titles be italicised or underlined?

[MORE]

Stuart Swirsky 

Sep 12, 2007 01:27

It's an ineresting article which could be better - but I don't have the patience to correct Mr.McWhorter's own grammar... [MORE]

John Newton 

Sep 11, 2007 19:44

In Shakespeare's day they were used to convey emphasis, and italics (like those I just used) were used to indicate... [MORE]

william flesch 

Sep 11, 2007 22:57

The bizarre habit of using quotation marks for emphasis has been around for decades, and not just in semi-literate signage.... [MORE]

Carl Tait 

Sep 12, 2007 10:20

An interesting little piece on a phenomenon that I've noticed myself many times over the years. I always thought that... [MORE]

George Higgs 

Sep 12, 2007 10:47

"Walking the streets of New York , nothing cheers me up like signs written under the impression that quotation marks... [MORE]

Lahoucine Ouzgane 

Sep 12, 2007 11:09

John McWhorter, linguist, has one "very interesting" sentence -- diagram this one, even if you accept the barbarism "different ...... [MORE]

Clifford Huffman 

Sep 12, 2007 11:12

Heheh, yeah, I'm proud of my multi-pun. :)

I first would like to point out that quotation marks never specifically denote... [MORE]

Alan 

Sep 12, 2007 11:14

I agree with everything John McWhorter has said but I'm still not as sanguine about the security of standard written... [MORE]

Tedd McHenry 

Sep 12, 2007 11:30

This article is the perfect forum for me to present my pet peeve: the complete abandonment of the past and... [MORE]

Sean F 

Sep 13, 2007 18:27

People who 'verb' nouns and 'noun' verbs probably have other disgusting habits as well. I try not to associate with... [MORE]

Burt Kaufman 

Sep 12, 2007 11:50

This is completely true. It was in the editorial of the first issue of a para-professional trade periodical. The author... [MORE]

steve hunt 

Sep 12, 2007 13:25

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