From skills-for-humanity
Tracks how word meanings shift over time or across communities, identifying concept creep, definition drift, and semantic capture. Useful when key terms are contested or have changed meaning.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/skills-for-humanity:s4h-linguistics-semantic-driftThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Words do not hold still.
Words do not hold still.
"Literally" now means "figuratively" in common usage. "Decimate" originally meant to kill one in ten; it now means to devastate. "Woke" migrated from an African-American vernacular expression of political awareness to a mainstream progressive identity marker to a political pejorative — in roughly fifteen years. These shifts are not merely interesting: they change what arguments are available, which coalitions are possible, and what policies feel legitimate.
Ludwig Wittgenstein's later philosophy provides the theoretical grounding: words do not have fixed meanings determined by their reference to the world. They have meanings determined by use — by the language games people play with them in particular contexts and communities. When the community changes, the game changes, and the word changes with it.
Semantic drift takes several forms. Natural drift is organic evolution through changing usage — inevitable, mostly benign, occasionally confusing. Concept creep, identified by Nick Haslam, is the expansion of a concept's boundaries, typically in psychology and social discourse: "trauma", "addiction", and "abuse" have all expanded substantially from their clinical origins, gaining explanatory power and losing diagnostic precision simultaneously. Deliberate semantic capture is strategic: political and commercial actors invest in changing what a word means because the word controls a contested domain. "Freedom", "natural", "sustainable", and "wellness" are all sites of ongoing definitional struggle.
This skill traces a word's semantic trajectory, identifies the mechanism of drift, and assesses the consequences of the shift.
Step 1: Establish the Starting Point Identify the term or concept under analysis. Establish its origin meaning:
If the drift is cross-group rather than historical (the word means different things to different communities simultaneously), establish the different meanings currently in play and who holds each.
Framing check: Confirm the term and the semantic analysis task before continuing. State what you've identified — the term being analyzed and whether the drift is historical, cross-community, or both — in one sentence, then use AskUserQuestion:
Step 2: Map the Semantic Trajectory Trace how the meaning has changed. For historical drift, identify the key moments of change and what drove them. For cross-group divergence, map the different current meanings and the communities that hold them. The trajectory should include:
Step 3: Identify the Mechanism How did the drift occur? Name the mechanism:
Before assessing consequences: Present the trajectory and mechanism mapping. Use AskUserQuestion:
Step 4: Assess the Consequences The drift is a fact; its consequences depend on context. Assess:
Step 5: Identify the Strategic Implications Given the trajectory and the consequences, what should someone do with this information?
Before proceeding, use the AskUserQuestion tool. State your interpretation of the situation in 1–2 sentences, then ask:
Proceed based on their selection. If the user reframes, incorporate the correction before running any analysis.
Term: [the word or phrase under analysis]
Semantic Trajectory
| Stage | Meaning | Context | Timeframe/Community |
|---|---|---|---|
| Original | |||
| [Shift 1] | |||
| Current |
Mechanism: [named mechanism with one-paragraph explanation of how it operated in this case]
Consequences
Strategic Implications What to do with this analysis — whether using the term, contesting the drift, or designing around it.
Semantic drift analysis sits at the intersection of linguistics, political theory, and strategic communication. The key Wittgensteinian insight — that meaning is use — means that no term is permanently secured. This is both a vulnerability (terms you rely on can be captured) and an opportunity (terms that have been captured can sometimes be reclaimed).
The nearest-neighbor trap: confusing semantic drift with euphemism. Euphemism is a deliberate act of renaming to soften; semantic drift is a structural change in meaning that happens to a term regardless of intention. A word can drift without anyone intending to euphemize it, and a euphemism can be introduced without causing drift if it doesn't enter the semantic system.
This skill pairs naturally with /s4h-linguistics-framing (the drift often reflects a frame change) and /s4h-epistemology-epistemic-status (when a drifted term is being used as a knowledge claim that relies on one of its contested meanings).
After delivering this output, use AskUserQuestion to offer the next move:
/s4h-linguistics-framing — Examine the framing shift that drove or followed the semantic drift/s4h-linguistics-connotation — Audit the current connotative freight of the term in detail/s4h-epistemology-epistemic-status — Assess whether arguments relying on this term are using a consistent or contested meaningnpx claudepluginhub human-avatar/skills-for-humanityRoutes to the right linguistics skill based on your situation. Use when you want language analysis — framing, connotation, pragmatics, or semantic drift — applied without knowing which specific tool fits.
Traces word origins from modern forms through proto-language roots, identifies cognates across language families, documents semantic drift with dated attestations, and flags folk etymologies.
Deconstructs an English word into core semantics, original imagery, and philosophical insight. Invoke when a user asks to deeply explain or master a specific English word.