Top 11 Quotes & Sayings by Robert Burchfield

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English scientist Robert Burchfield.
Last updated on November 24, 2024.
Robert Burchfield

Robert William Burchfield CNZM, CBE was a lexicographer, scholar, and writer, who edited the Oxford English Dictionary for thirty years to 1986, and was chief editor from 1971.

To finish is both a relief and a release from an extraordinarily pleasant prison.
I am sure that the two main forms of English, American English and British English, separated geographically from the beginning and severed politically since 1776, are continuing to move apart, and that existing elements of linguistic dissimilarity between them will intensify as time goes on, notwithstanding the power of the cinema, TV, Time Magazine, and other two-way gluing and fuelling devices.
I believe it is imperative to see modern English grammar as a rich and diverse linguistic system deposited on our [England's] shores 1,500 years ago, and left with us unweakened, though substantially changed by the social and political events of the intervening period.
At all periods of the [English] language it is difficult to assign a beginning date to most new words and meanings. They tend to slip into the language silently, and are placed in date order only when scholars subsequently get to work.
In 1776, at the point of severance, except for an infusion of words from east coast Indian languages, the English language of North America was not in any radical way dissimilar from that of what the American settlers called the mother country.
Lexicography is a chastening as well as an illuminating and fascinating art. — © Robert Burchfield
Lexicography is a chastening as well as an illuminating and fascinating art.
The English language is rather like a monster accordion, stretchable at the whim of the editor, compressible ad lib.
Vulgarity finds its antidote; old crudities become softened with time. Distinctions, both those that are useful and those that are burdensome, flourish and die, reflourish and die again.
American English is the greatest influence of English everywhere.
Computer users soon learn that the miraculous powers of personal computers are based on avoidance of error.
The language of Doctor Johnson and Mrs Hester Lynch Thrale, and that of their adult contemporaries, was the stately language of the time, polished, stylish, unordinary, even in the intimate pages of their diaries, and the regime of instruction was severe and practical.
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