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The answer to this post is "like".......
most overheard conversations these days are along the lines of:
"....and she was like yeah but, and he was like driving, she was like saying like like like....."
Drone mounted lasers to be deployed to control this horrible and lazy trait.
Have we had "Bigly" yet?
So
Which seems to start lots of answers to questions these days usually in sentences that end ",like" or "y'get me?"
Super
Enormity
Quiver (of bikes)
nealglover - Member
If you're mildly irritated by "decimate" not meaning the Roman Legion "reduce by a tenth" your mild irritation is misguided. Decimate means "to tithe", it's to do with collecting taxes.
Both of which would be "historical" definitions.Pretty much everyone uses it correctly, according to the current OED definition.
I'd go as far as to say, anyone that pretends to be irritated by people using it "incorrectly" is just looking for an excuse to sound clever. (Because they watched an episode of QI and remembered a bit of it)
Blimey it was just an example , good job I didn't use myriad .
😆
My mini rantette was more aimed at a guy I work with who is constantly "correcting" people about this sort of stuff. Half of what he says is wrong but nobody can be arsed anymore to tell him.
This just makes him worse though as he now thinks he is the only person who knows anything 😕
Bombers
Can I get disinterested and uninterested. Like, I am good.
summit and medal now turned into verbs to summit and to medal... really? didnt get that memo.
"Going forward" really boils my piss; there's an air of absolution about it that I find disdainful.
"Word!!"
Horrorshow.
Cougar - Moderator
Thanks for that, that's the sort of linguistic wrangling that keeps me awake at night. See also, flammable and inflammable.
70's electrical manuals:
'Depress the button'.
Eh?
Press it?
Release it if already pressed?
Buy it a subscription?
Genius.
Artist, often used to describe non creative types.
Flavour, is a problem for me. I think it should only be used to describe taste. I know it can be used to describe the atmosphere of a place but it doesn't sit right with me. To make matters worse it appears it is written in the contracts of all BBC news reporters to use " flavour " as much as possible to describe anything other than taste.
I beg your pardon?
You are pardoned.
Ruler.
For fu**ing measuring.
Miracle used to mean an inexplicable event requiring divine intervention. Now it is used mainly to describe any medical cure.
[i]"I could care less"[/i]
Could you? Oh that's good. For a moment there I thought you didn't care. Turns out that you [i]do[/i] in fact care, but admit that it would be possible for you to care less than you currently do.
Not quite on topic but I am a member of the local library and most of the books I take out somebody has decided to put lines through words that they think are incorrectly used and put in what they think is correct . Really pisses me off , firstly it's not your book leave it alone , secondly I'm not sure if most of what they think they are correcting is wrong in the first place .
Oh and [i]"pacific"/"pacifically"[/i] can get in the sea too while we are at it.
My mate says touche when someone says something funny. Drives me nuts but feels like I'd be being a know-it-all prick to correct him.
When a person being interviewed says look when they mean listen. Either word is rude and patronising (what do you think I'm doing?) but looking at you even more carefully isn't going to help you win your argument.
My mate says touche when someone says something funny. Drives me nuts but feels like I'd be being a know-it-all prick to correct him.
Do you mean touché?
Yours,
A know-it-all prick.
😀
When a person being interviewed says look when they mean listen.
Cameron was always a big fan of this and it seems to have spread to other politicians lately. [i]"Look, I'm not here to.."[/i]
I think it's supposed to be some kind of faux-straight talking man-in-the-street thing.
On the same theme, the use of the word [i]"Honestly"[/i] by politicians. As if to highlight that most of what they say is not honest.
Oh and "pacific"/"pacifically" can get in the sea too while we are at it.
Can it not "get in the ocean" instead. Just to keep things accurate.
Retro.
GrahamS - MemberCameron was always a big fan of this
It's why he keeps getting knocked down crossing the road.
But in the same vein, "fair". Whenever a Tory says it, it means someone's going to die for no reason.
Or "fair" when motorists use it, to mean that when there is a safety initiative to try to stop drivers killing people, the same level of policing effort should be put into enforcing laws for those road users who don't kill other people.
Super used a prefix to an adjective.
"OMG our meal was super tasty"
"Those shoes are super gorgeous"
Etc.
False ****ers.
For sure. May be understandable although unacceptable from a non English speaking euro type but other wise it's horrid.
I am guilty of both "for sure" and "super". Though mostly because I spend so much time dealing with kids, I say "for sure" a lot when speaking to kids from overseas- english language tuition tends to be a little americanised anyway but also it's a nice simple way of reinforcing a point.
@derek - you can (probably) thank, or blame, Cav for that; super happy or super excited.
I know it's not strictly relevant to the thread, but why does that Sturmey Archer equipped Raleigh Bomber on page 2 have a derailleur/spoke protector on it?
Anyway, as you were.
Chaos.
It means a complete absence of order.
It doesn't mean a few trains are late due to a points failure at Clapham Jct...unless the points had turned into a large bunch of bananas called Gerald and had decided to run for intergalactic president after proposing to Susan Boyle following a long and heartfelt duet where Gerald had admitted his hair was not his own, in which case the term "chaos on the railways" would, for once, actually be appropriate.
And don't get me started on "very unique"
Battling as in '....commuters battling through traffic chaos'.
Yeugh.
From whence.
Unbelievable...incredible...unimaginable...
No, I can believe/imagine it.
Fulsome is my current grr word. Fulsome praise is a false, way over the top, cringing compliment. Think Father Jack and the bishop. A fulsome apology is an insincere, overblown one. But hey ho. Language changes.
Which is why I don't object to medalling or summiting. Making verbs into nouns is how language comes about. I imagine 600 years ago there was somebody in a pub moaning that his boss told him to plough the field. "Plough! Plough! A verb? Didn't he mean go and make lines in the field USING the plough?"
Although using is a gerund, not a verb.
"President"
