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Sweden is about to present its first ever official
dictionary featuring safer alternatives of words deemed either offensive or
racist. Apparently, many Swedes are unclear about the more appropriate options.
"It is a better
service for the readers, because we do get a lot of people calling up and
asking questions about certain words. The obviously offensive ones people know,
but they don't always understand what they should choose instead. Which words
are derogatory changes with time," Sofia Malmgard, an adviser at Sweden’s Language Council, told the Local.
RT.com reports:
The official dictionary from the Swedish Academy is
due for publication next month, and will feature more options for words like
Neger (negro), zigenare (gypsy) and others. Next to offensives word will be the
phrase “anvand ustallet”,
meaning "use instead".
The dictionary that will include 13,000 amendments,
including the much talked-about gender-neutral personal pronoun “hen”. This little word has been a
subject of debates for several years, since a children’s author first decided
to use it.
Now it is here to stay, either when the text refers
to a transsexual, or in places where the gender of the person is either unknown
or irrelevant.
Explanations that a term is offensive were present
on the pages of the dictionary before, but without the alternate suggestions.
Malmgard hopes casual racism will be reduced as a result of the new measure.
Sweden is first among many foreigners for its human
rights record and views on controversial topics relating to tolerance of
different groups of people, and immigration has been a hot topic with the
Swedes.
In 2013, it granted Syrian refugees automatic
residency, while its asylum requests are expected to reach 90,000 by the end of
the year.
While an estimated 60 percent favor immigration in
Sweden, a new survey commissioned by the newspaper Dagens Nyheter revealed that
people are starting to worry about integration. Some 10 percent, according to
the poll, fear that efforts at integrating foreigners aren’t working.
Those debates have contributed to the decision to
implement the new measures, according to the dictionary’s editor-in-chief
Professor Sven-Goran Malmgren, who spoke to Sveriges Radio on Monday. The
academic’s organization will study the effect of the new changes on the
readership after they come into force.
"Words are always really important. This is
about how one describes reality and this in turn can have different
motives," he added.
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