
Macfarlane ( 2010.)
asserts that in a society where the outdoors is increasingly replaced
with the indoor and a virtual existence, the language of landscape is lost or
replaced by the language of the technical and virtual, our knowledge and
understanding of the natural world and the language associated with it is
diminished, leaving it open to desecration. In 2008 it was noted that many words relating to nature were culled
from the Oxford Junior Dictionary and replaced by words associated with the
inside. For example, some words that were omitted were as follows; buttercup,
tulip, raven, and conker, these words being replaced with such words as
celebrity, compulsory, block graph and database.The likes of almond, blackberry and crocus first made way for analogue, block graph and celebrity in the Oxford Junior Dictionary in 2007. Laurence Rose, who works for the RSPB also provided a list of additional words taken out, including hamster, heron, herring, kingfisher, lark, leopard, lobster, magpie, minnow, mussel, newt, otter, ox, oyster and panther. One can acknowledge that it is necessary to recognise the need to introduce new words and to make room for them , that language is influenced by environment, however the current 2012 edition maintained the changes, and instead of catkin, cauliflower, chestnut and clover, today’s edition of the dictionary, which is aimed at seven-year-olds starting Key Stage Two, features cut and paste, broadband and analogue.There is a shocking, proven connection between the decline in natural play and the decline in children’s wellbeing. Will the removal of these words from the Oxford Junior Dictionary ruin lives? Probably not but do we want an alphabet for children that begins ‘A is for Acorn, B is for Buttercup, C is for Conker’; or one that begins ‘A is for Attachment, B is for Block-Graph, C is for Chatroom ? The Oxford Dictionaries have a rightful authority and a leading place in cultural life, however, should they not address such issues and seek to help shape children’s understanding of the world, in a holistic manner and not just to mirror its trends.