My new least favorite is "Oh Em Gee!!!!"
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I'm a pretty bad Grammar Nazi, but I have no problem with someone saying "I lol'd so hard at that", because they know what they are saying. It's when someone says something like "irregardless" or something that they THINK means something else that I get annoyed. I don't know why, I think language defensiveness is very irrational.
http://www.cracked.com/article_15664...you-think.html - one of my favourite cracked articles.
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Originally posted by Fryk View PostOh sweet, chainsaw-juggling Tchernabog I hate crap like that!!! The one that used to really drive me up a wall was how people living around New Orleans used to pronounce "mayonnaise".
Mai-nezzz. GRAHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!! Even if you're trying to be pseudo-french, there'd be an 'o' in there.
“The problem with socialism is that you eventually,
run out of other people’s money.” – Margaret Thatcher
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Originally posted by Fryk View PostKnow what's really funny about that? My wife's family does the complete opposite... all mayo is Miracle Whip!Jack Faire
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Originally posted by jackfaire View PostWhat's funny is that little extra kick in Miracle Whip that they advertise so heavily is precisely why I don't like it."The hero is the person who can act mindfully, out of conscience, when others are all conforming, or who can take the moral high road when others are standing by silently, allowing evil deeds to go unchallenged." — Philip Zimbardo
TUA Games & Fiction // Ponies
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Originally posted by Wingates_Hellsing View PostWhich brings us to tonight's word: copywright
Anywhoo (there's one I use all the time), there's no greater a non-word used as a word in all of history than lol.
When someone nearby utters the phrase "I lolled so hard at that"... I want to stab them in the soul...Jack Faire
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I do it occasionally to mock others, but the regional people around here who say "taters" instead of "potatoes" and other stuff like "Yous two" instead of "You two"...
I hate living where Larry the Cable Guy and the way he talks (and acts) is considered "cool".
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I love made-up words. Some will stick around, and some won't, but I don't see why we shouldn't give them a shot. We have so many new things in the world, just in the past 20 years. Why not expand the language to better describe everything we experience?
For example, "truthiness" is a marvelous word, and it fills a niche. There's no other way of saying what that word means.
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Originally posted by Boozy View PostI love made-up words. Some will stick around, and some won't, but I don't see why we shouldn't give them a shot. We have so many new things in the world, just in the past 20 years. Why not expand the language to better describe everything we experience?
For example, "truthiness" is a marvelous word, and it fills a niche. There's no other way of saying what that word means.
It's taking two real words and mashing them into one made up word.Jack Faire
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Originally posted by jackfaire View PostMy main issue with Electronical is that it is the equivilant of saying I want to buy a GameBox, Playcube, or XStation.
It's taking two real words and mashing them into one made up word.
telephone and television are mash-up words too, and not even correctly put together, strictly speaking, as the two parts of each word come from separate languages.
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Originally posted by Boozy View PostI love made-up words. Some will stick around, and some won't, but I don't see why we shouldn't give them a shot. We have so many new things in the world, just in the past 20 years. Why not expand the language to better describe everything we experience?
For example, "truthiness" is a marvelous word, and it fills a niche. There's no other way of saying what that word means.ZOE: Preacher, don't the Bible got some pretty specific things to say about killing?
SHEPHERD BOOK: Quite specific. It is, however, Somewhat fuzzier on the subject of kneecaps.
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Originally posted by Slytovhand View PostWhile this may certainly be true, the problem I think that is being described is when people don't even know that they're using a wrong word, and that they think it is the right one - to the point that other people start to think that it's a real word. They haven't 'learnt' it anywhere, they've just made it up, because they think it's correct..."The hero is the person who can act mindfully, out of conscience, when others are all conforming, or who can take the moral high road when others are standing by silently, allowing evil deeds to go unchallenged." — Philip Zimbardo
TUA Games & Fiction // Ponies
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