"So"
Recall, if you will, the time when
one difference between the person on the street and the one trained in public speaking was
that the average person would often be caught beginning a sentence or thought
or response to a question with some innocuous utterance such as “Uh” or “you
know”. They might also continue to pepper their conversation with additional
“uhs” and “you know”s, apparently believing that any sound was preferable to
silence.
Though not totally eradicated,
superfluous words are significantly reduced in most TV and radio interviews and
conversations in recent years. The occasional athlete may still include a
number of “you know”s and “uhs” in answers to painfully inane questions about
how he felt sinking the winning shot or putt. But for the most part, one can
listen to interviews without wincing as much.
There is a new trend, however, in
public utterances. And this tends to hold both for politicians, scientists, and
scholarly trained persons being interviewed concerning topics of their area of
expertise. The new trend is that after
being asked a nice open-ended question designed to allow the respondent to wax
eloquent the first word spoken in the answer well be, “So”.
“How does the new MOAB bomb change
the way we deal with ISIS”?
“So, it was designed and is intended
to not only do effective damage such as reaching tunnel or underground targets
but it also serves as a psychological weapon.”
[Hypothetical example]
What purpose does the introductory “So”
serve in the answer? It acknowledges the
legitimacy of the question in the first place.
It seems to declare that what follows is indeed responsive to the
question.
“So” can exist in language as an
adjective, adverb or conjunction. (Some dictionaries even include pronoun and
noun uses.) The “so” I am addressing is the conjuction designed to introduce
subsequent thought or information.
Listen to NPR or one of the TV news
interview shows over the course of several programs and days and you’ll
discover that “So” is so common an introduction to an answer that it is used
more than half the time. It has not yet
become such a cliched use that it is distracting. Typically a responder will
use it only at the beginning of an answer, not repeatedly throughout the
explanation. This keeps it from becoming as annoying as “uh” and “you know”
were for a number of years.
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