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Americanize!: Why the Americanisation of English is a Good Thing

4 Extra Debut. Susie Dent explores Americanisms in British English like movie, elevator or cookie - should we love not loathe them? From 2017.

Do words like movie, elevator or cookie raise your linguistic hackles?

Do you hate hearing someone ask if they can ‘get’ a coffee?

Lexicographer Susie Dent is more usually found in the Dictionary Corner of Channel 4’s Countdown.

Now she sets out to explore the history of how Americanisms have entered British English. She argues that perhaps we should learn to love these transatlantic imports.

We hear from the Queen’s English Society about why they believe British English should be protected and John Humphrys tells us about the Americanisms he particularly dislikes.

Linguist Dr Lynne Murphy reveals that dislike of Americanisms goes back to Dr Johnson and Michael Proffitt, the Chief Editor of the Oxford English Dictionary, tells Susie about some of the unexpected words which started life in America.

There’s another surprise when Susie travels to Stratford-upon-Avon, where Dr Nick Walton from the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust shows that some of the most disliked Americanisms first appear in Shakespeare’s plays.

There’s also an actor’s perspective from Tamsin Greig, who’s recently appeared in Twelfth Night at the National Theatre in London, and the singer Marty Wilde remembers teenagers’ enthusiasm for all things American in the 1950s and their elders’ despair at this assault on the English language.

Susie concludes with an exhortation to all of us to throw off our British linguistic reserve and to Americanize – even if only a little bit.

She encourages us to embrace the verve of American vocabulary and to recognize that many of our American bugbears actually came from Britain in the first place.

Producer: Louise Adamson
Executive Producer: Samir Shah

A Juniper production for ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio 4, first broadcast in May 2017.

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Fri 1 Aug 2025 00:30

Broadcasts

  • Sat 20 May 2017 10:30
  • Wed 9 Aug 2017 16:00
  • Tue 20 Nov 2018 11:00
  • Thu 31 Jul 2025 10:30
  • Thu 31 Jul 2025 16:30
  • Fri 1 Aug 2025 00:30