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Jargon

The deliberate obfuscation of language. Why do we use jargon? Mike Williams explains

Why Factor this week, looks at jargon. The deliberate obfuscation of language. Or in other words, saying things in a way that makes it difficult to understand. George Orwell, in the early twentieth century, hated this 鈥榠nflated style鈥� of writing and there have been many attempts to get rid of it. In the 1940鈥檚 Sir Ernest Gowers from the British Civil Service wrote a book, 鈥楶lain Words鈥� which has been re-printed again and again 鈥� most recently by his great grand-daughter who tells presenter, Mike Williams why jargon is just as bad today as it ever was. It鈥檚 been blamed for pulling the wool over the eyes of the general public and it鈥檚 the same all over the world.

Produced by Nina Robinson

(Photo: The classic work Plain Words, originally written and published by Sir Ernest Gowers who wanted to see the English language free of jargon. 麻豆社 copyright)

10 minutes

Last on

Wed 6 May 2015 16:20GMT

Broadcast

  • Wed 6 May 2015 16:20GMT