Apparently it has a use in mathematics, found via the internet so can't claim I knew this. However, surely language changes over time, I don't think anyone has ever stopped this even the Academie Francaise. If I don't like a word, I don't use it.
I agree that it has American roots but does anyone else think they would use them slightly differently. To me "normality" is what happens naturally whereas "normalcy" doesn't feel so natural so I would probably only use it for a contrived normal (if ever).
I looked at the Grammarist website and it doesn’t look particularly scholarly or authoritative. I imagine it’s American, from the spelling and example in MiniMoon’s extract.
‘Normalcy’ is an American usage, and if you use British English it should be ‘normality’.
I don't like it, but it is the alternative form of normality. This is from Grammarist on the web: Normalcy was popularized in the early 20th century thanks to President Warren G. Harding’s “return to normalcy” campaign slogan (though the word did exist before then), and language authorities have been unable to stamp it out.
who are these language authorities and who put them in charge?
I don't like it, but it is the alternative form of normality. This is from Grammarist on the web: Normalcy was popularized in the early 20th century thanks to President Warren G. Harding’s “return to normalcy” campaign slogan (though the word did exist before then), and language authorities have been unable to stamp it out.
I have just been watching a report on BBC news about vaccinating children. I don't know who the reporter was but several times he talked about getting back to "normalcy". Shouldn't it be "normality"? Is "normalcy" really a word?