The Swiss linguist [Ferdinand de Saussure][1] understood language as a social contract: >Language is not purely linguistic—it is enabled and reinforced by social conventions of use which are and have been transmitted from mouth to ear and from one generation of speakers to another. [Language is an ongoing contract within a speech community][2] which endures and is relatively resistent to change; even if this relative stability cannot be explained naturalistically, it supposes an inertial effect of shared investment in a tradition that an arbitrary system of signs considered on its own cannot account for. This receptive stance and acknowledged passivity of the language user before the sign removes any remnant of voluntariam from language, considering that historically sedimented social preactice largely constrains individual free choice in language use. — Beata Stawarska, _Saussure’s Philosophy of Language as Phenomenology_, 2015. The inertial force inherent in language assures that change is not generally subject to individual whim but occurs in increments across time. The word [_sunny_][3], for instance, emerged in English in the early 14th c. meaning, unsurprisingly, ‘full of sun’. This means that 14th c. speakers first heard the word _sunny_, found it apt and useful, and agreed to use it themselves and pass it on to their children. The basis of a conversation, even a banal one about the weather, is that the speakers generally agree on the meanings of words in particular contexts. If Gina wishes to assign a meaning polar opposite to the one established some seven centuries ago, she is violating this social contract and will likely pay a social price. Not only will she be constantly explaining herself, but she will be dismissed as excruciatingly annoying. Unless Gina is, say, a popular novelist, an academic with a large list of publications, or a political figure especially noted for eloquence, her individual chances of any lasting influence on the language approach zero: those whose language is mirrored in dictionaries are educated elites. Thus the degree to which a dictionary is descriptive is limited by its aspiration to be a standard reference work. Take the pronunciation of the word _almond_. The [_New English Dictionary_][4] (1888), predecessor of the OED, gives a single pronunciation, followed still today by [Collins online][5] for _British_ pronunciation: \ˈɑːmənd\. For current _American_ pronunciation, however, there are eight: >ˈɑmənd ; äˈmənd; also ˈæmˈənd & ælmənd; amˈənd & alˈmənd; ˈɔlmənd ; ôlˈmənd Not only are there variances in the first vowel, but whether the l is pronounced at all. [Merriam Webster][6] gives only four variants: >\ ˈä-mənd , ˈa- , ˈäl- , ˈal- \ And [Random House][7] only three: >ah-muh nd, am-uh nd; spelling pronunciation al-muh nd The remark that pronouncing the l in _almond_ is a [spelling pronunciation][8] is an alert that the traditional way to pronounce the word is without the l. Yet more and more speakers, especially younger Americans, are pronouncing the l in words like _balm, calm, psalm,_ and _almond_. A purely prescriptive dictionary, however, would give the traditional pronunciation of the NED as the single acceptable pronunciation for North America as well. Collins is by far the most descriptive, and while no dictionary gives preference to pronouncing the l, only Random House points out its somewhat suspect nature. Contrast this to _falcon_, which most everyone on both sides of the Atlantic now pronounce the l while the traditional spelling is relegated to last place in the list. You could perform semantic tests on various dictionaries as well. How many, for instance, allow the adjective _unique_ to be compared (This sofa is the most unique), which would indicate a more descriptive approach, or condemn or ignore it prescriptively? Yet such questions are mostly peripheral. There is no rigid dichotomy of prescriptivism writ in stone battling a descriptivist chaos. As de Saussure suggests, the social contract of language is remarkably durable. [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_de_Saussure [2]: https://books.google.de/books?id=MR15BgAAQBAJ&pg=PT66&lpg=PT66&dq=Saussure+langue+contract&source=bl&ots=CQg_IWJSVd&sig=y9qDhW_kQQMaVz0Q8TNtK18X5qM&hl=de&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjo7_LPvuLdAhUMKewKHWZUAjQ4ChDoATACegQICRAB#v=onepage&q=Saussure%20langue%20contract&f=false [3]: https://www.etymonline.com/word/sunny#etymonline_v_24557 [4]: https://archive.org/details/oed01arch/page/245 [5]: https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/almond [6]: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/almond [7]: https://www.dictionary.com/browse/almond [8]: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spelling_pronunciation