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Decimate is a word with a correct meaning, to reduce by 10%, and an incorrect but commonly used meaning, as a synonym to devastate.
For example, that “I am devastated by the loss of my husband to cancer” is not the same as “I am decimated by the loss of my husband to cancer.”
People also misuse other words, quite commonly. It is a fact that they do so, but not a desirable action.
Comment by mikee — October 26, 2011 @ 10:14 pm
Meanings shift over time. Today’s meaning of a word is yesterday’s “incorrect” meaning. And if we’re going to play the originalist game, the original meaning of decimate was a tad nastier than simply “reducing” by 10%. A 10% reduction in force means 10% of your workers got laid off, not that every 10th got murdered at random.
Comment by Xrlq — October 26, 2011 @ 10:21 pm
Meh. If one means “devastated,” why not say “devastated?” What is gained by using a word that — even if it is a synonym, which it isn’t — brings no profit to the user or the listener (many of whom are so distracted by the impropriety of the usage that they miss the rest of what is said)?
Comment by McGehee — January 1, 2012 @ 10:47 am
They are synonyms. Arguing the definition of “decimate” based on what the word used to mean makes no more sense than arguing the definition of “devastate* based on what *that* word used to mean. Every language known to man is chock full of words that used to mean one thing and now mean something else.
Comment by Xrlq — January 1, 2012 @ 11:04 am
Wow, I’m late to this. I get that meanings shift over time, but what bugs me about this particular kind of shift is that it leaves us without a word that means what the commonly-misused word used to mean. We now no longer have a word that clearly means “reduce by 10%,” just as we no longer have a word that clearly means “one of a kind,” etc.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I need to go tell those kids to get off my lawn.
Comment by tgirsch — January 24, 2012 @ 10:05 am
I understand, but what really gets under my skin is never having had a word meaning “increase 7.3%.” or “three of a kind” in the first place.
Comment by Xrlq — January 24, 2012 @ 10:16 am
Triplicate?
In any case, I see how “decimate” isn’t a huge loss, but the loss of “unique” matters, because the original meaning is still needed fairly often.
Comment by tgirsch — January 24, 2012 @ 10:38 am
(Also, in your examples, we NEVER had a word that meant those things. In mine, we used to, but because of meaning shift, we no longer do. Hence we’re dealing with something lost rather than something that didn’t exist in the first place.)
Comment by tgirsch — January 24, 2012 @ 10:43 am
There was actually a version of “decimation” wherein 1 in 10 of a condemned group survived.
Comment by SPQR — January 30, 2012 @ 6:41 pm
Interesting. That definition makes just as much sense etymologically, and fits much closer to most people’s traditional understanding of the word. My guess is the average joe would assume 0 in 10 survive a “decimation,” until you point out that it’s based on the same root as “decimal,” at which point he’d grudgingly concede that 1 in 10 must survive.
The more I think about it, the idea that decimation ever meant reduction *by* 10% is weird. Imagine if “annihilate” meant “reduce by nothing.”
Comment by Xrlq — January 31, 2012 @ 7:20 am
This seems apropos.
Comment by tgirsch — January 31, 2012 @ 10:32 am
Indeed, and not just because it’s a web site called Xkcd in response to a guy named Spqr on a blog called Xrlq. But somehow it seems to fit in nicely that way, as well.
Comment by Xrlq — January 31, 2012 @ 11:10 am
Regardless, I feel the connotation of a word such as “decimate” will always conjure up a feeling of significant loss to any reader. Very interesting post.
Comment by Jackie H. — April 5, 2012 @ 9:17 am