how about this:
"you wouldn't believe it, she literally blew up!"
but she didn't really blow up, she just yelled.
LITERALLY is overused.
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how about this:
"you wouldn't believe it, she literally blew up!"
but she didn't really blow up, she just yelled.
LITERALLY is overused.
LOL
Two of the first words in reply to this thread (good thread idea, btw!!!) are "care" and "caring"
What does that say about our society and our misuse of words?
My sons fave word at the moment is "addicting"... UGH! When is school going back again?? All I hear is "Oh I LOVE those. They are addicting" all day LONG!
Ten year olds! They latch on to one thing and run with it! :rolleyes:
"very unique"
It's either unique or it's not.
"Orientate"
The "can't" thing is a real issue with me too. I deal with it all the time with clients. For eg:
Client: My leg was soooo sore I couldn't walk to the bathroom.
Me: Then how did you get to the bathroom?
Client: I walked, but it really hurt.
Me: To me that means you *could* walk to the bathroom but it was difficult because of your pain.
Then the patient usually gets a little huffy because because I'm forcing them to be honest with themselves and me. All of my client's have to get used to a little tough love.
"incentivize"
What is with our culture that we have to add "-ate" or "-ize" to perfectly good verbs?
"Experienced rider".....hmmm wow...that's a toughie....how many of us have run the "Tour".....
"I seen..."
Drives me nuts - my boss must say this at least 10 times a day. One day I will "literally":p blow up:D and scream that it's "I SAW or I HAVE seen!!!!!"
Okay, I feel better now -- like I've re-orientated myself:p ....but really, it has gotten to the point where I have a very difficult time saying the word "seen" -- even if I'm using it correctly.:rolleyes:
Okay, I will stop now!
where do you live (general geographic location okay here) CSR1200 that your boss would say that?
Here are my peeves.
"Could care less." If you could care less, than you must care some amount. It's supposed to be "couldn't care less."
"Graduated" high school. It should be "graduated FROM high school". And going even further back (50 years?), they used to say "WAS graduated from high school."
That didn't "phase" me. The word is actually spelled faze.
"Nonplussed". This means the opposite of what many folks think it does. It means shocked, or speechless. People mis-use it when they mean unfazed, or unaffected.
Not a hated word, but a pet peeve: when people quote my typos and make them live for eternity. :p