Gobbledygook
Encyclopedia : G : GO : GOB : Gobbledygook
Gobbledygook or gobbledegook (sometimes shortened to gobbledegoo) is an English term used to describe nonsensical language, sound that resembles language but has no meaning, or encrypted text. It also means official, professional or pretentious verbiage. Plain language advocates use the term to mean that something is being expressed in an overly complicated manner. Gobbledygook does not carry connotations of foreignness. It refers to inherently baffling material.
The term was coined on March 30, 1944 by Maury Maverick, chairman of the United States Smaller War Plants Corporation. In a memo banning "gobbledygook language", he wrote "anyone using the words activation or implementation will be shot". [link] Maverick later used the word in the New York Times Magazine on May 21, 1944 as part of a further complaint against the obscure language used by his colleagues. His inspiration, he said, was the turkey, "always gobbledy gobbling and strutting with ludicrous pomposity. At the end of his gobble, there was a sort of gook."
Apparently he became tired of going to meetings where people rambled on about "maladjustments co-extensive with the problem areas" and "alternative but nevertheless meaningful minimae".
Examples
The following are notable quotations. Emphasis has been added in each example.Former United States President Ronald Reagan explained tax law revisions in an address to the nation, 28 May 1985:
- "Most (tax revisions) didn’t improve the system, they made it more like Washington itself: complicated, unfair, cluttered with gobbledygook and loopholes designed for those with the power and influence to hire high-priced legal and tax advisers." [link]
- "Gobbledygook may indicate a failure to think clearly, a contempt for one's clients, or more probably a mixture of both. A system that can't or won't communicate is not a safe basis for a democracy." [link]
- Leela: Within the black wall wherein lies paradise.
- The Doctor: Is that just religious gobbledygook or is that an actual place? [link]
- "Playing Doctor Who came as a great surprise to me. I had no idea that I would enjoy it so much. All that was required of me was to be able to speak complete gobbledygook with conviction." [link]
- "What's wrong with gobbledygook? We can't put it any better than a nurse who wrote about a baffling memo. She said that 'receiving information in this form makes us feel hoodwinked, inferior, definitely frustrated and angry, and it causes a divide between us and the writer.'"[link]
In popular culture
J.K. Rowling makes "Gobbledygook" the language of goblins in the Harry Potter novels.This word has been voted as one of the ten English words that were hardest to translate in June 2004 by a British translation company.
Incidental remarks
The Finnish equivalent, kapulakieli, means very artificial and overly complicated language full of foreign loans, especially judicial or technical text, which is almost impossible to understand for a layman, and produces difficulties even for professionals. Pekoraali refers to language which follows the rules of the linguistics and where the words are grammatically correct, but have no meaning besides being mere queues of phonemes. It refers to Lewis Carroll's poem Jabberwocky.
See also
In spanish, the word "cantinflear" refers, in a similar sense, to this kind of nonsense jargon, but used to say nothing. The name cames form the mexican humorist Cantinflas.External links
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
