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words from which,  in  fact, belong to both these categories. Yet,
                            poetic  words  have  a  further  characteristic  -  a  lofty,  high-flown,
                            sometimes archaic colouring:
                                  Alas! they had been friends in youth; But whispering tongues
                            can poison truth And constancy lives in realms above; And life is
                            thorny; and youth is vain; And to be wroth  with one we love, Doth
                            work like madness in the brain...” (Coleridge)
                                  Yet,  generally  speaking,  educated  people  in  both  modem
                            fiction  and  real  life  use  learned  words  quite  naturally  and  their
                            speech is certainly the richer for it.
                                  On  the  other  hand,  excessive  use  of  learned  elements  in
                            conversational  speech  presents  grave  hazards.  Utterances
                            overloaded  with  such  words  have  pretensions  of  refinement  and
                            elegance but achieve the exact opposite verging on the absurd and
                            ridiculous.  Writer  use  this  phenomenon  for  stylistic  purposes.
                            When a character  in a  book or in  a play uses too many  learned
                            words, the obvious inappropriatencss of his speech in an informal
                            situation produces a comic effect:
                                  Eliza  Doolittle  in  Pygmalion  by  B.  Shaw  engaging  in
                            traditional English small talk  answers the question “Will it rain,
                            do you think?” in the following way:
                                  “The shallow depression in the west of these islands is likely
                            to move slowly in an easterly direction. There are no indications of
                            any great change in the barometrical situation.
                                  Archaic  and  obsolete  words  stand  close  to  the  learned
                            words, particularly to the modes of poetic diction. Learned words
                            and  archaisms  arc  both  associated  with  the  printed  pages.  Yet
                            many learned words may also be used in conversational situations.
                            This  cannot  be  happened  to  archaisms,  which  are  invariably
                            restricted to the printed page. These words are moribund, already
                            partly or fully out of circulation, rejected by the living language.
                            Their last refuge is in historical novels (whose authors use them to
                            create  a  particular  period  atmosphere)  and,  of  course,  in  poetry
                            which is rather conservative in its choice of words.













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