jltc wrote:"utilize" -- There is NEVER a situation in which "use" wouldn't work just as well.
Clearly you're not a crossword puzzle player. "Honey, what's a 7 letter word meaning 'to make use of'?"
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jltc wrote:"utilize" -- There is NEVER a situation in which "use" wouldn't work just as well.
kmellis wrote:[We can imagine why many women might object to moist
YttriumOx wrote:Describing a vagina as a "taint" however does indeed strike me as pretty horrid.
Draco18s wrote:AvatarIII wrote:i actually find irregardless to be the only word that annoys me in the comic, because all the other words are slang, (apart from moist and taint, which i have no problems with anyway,)
"Taint" is actually slang, BTW. It started as an abbreviation as "it ain't" and is slang for the perineum.
Taint meaning "a trace of a bad or undesirable quality or substance" is a different word entirely.
Wow, what a terrible explanation of neologisms...willpellmn wrote:Americans are lazy and we always shorten words, so why would we tack added syllables onto them? He answered that this was just a different form of laziness - stretching a word out by adding pointless syllables to it, so you can take more time before you have to think about the next word.
Wow, what a terrible explanation of neologisms...
geurts wrote:Guesstimate is a good word. It's hard not to understand what that means, no? Very clear.
A town which never existed? No, I think if we're giving credit where credit is due, we should look to the United States in the 1930s. The OED's first entry is from 1936, but that's a New York Times article saying the word was already in use by "the statisticians and population experts".tetsujin wrote:I think we must give credit where credit is due: this word traces its origin to the early days of Port Manteau, Louisiana.
I think you might be missing the point.gmalivuk wrote:A town which never existed? No, I think if we're giving credit where credit is due, we should look to the United States in the 1930s. The OED's first entry is from 1936, but that's a New York Times article saying the word was already in use by "the statisticians and population experts".tetsujin wrote:I think we must give credit where credit is due: this word traces its origin to the early days of Port Manteau, Louisiana.
joee wrote:glasnt wrote:LSN wrote:On an unrelated note: where is the forum link on the main site page?
I was worried, but I thought it was more of a deterrent, like the lack of comments on his blag posts.
But just want to give him and his misses a big hug and a cake shaped like the internet
*missus? Unless you think he has more than one
Reading that comic makes my brain hurt. Need bleach
Those arguing that neologisms offer nuances, shades of meaning, and connotation not otherwise found in the English language should learn Ancient Greek. I've heard rumors that it allowed a speaker to be very specific about connotation.
Bronsonrock wrote:I also have to admit that I have no idea what "metrosexual" means and had never heard it until I read it here. Based on the amount of hatred it seems to have, I'm considering myself lucky.
Finally, my teenage daughter brought a new word to my attention (she hates it as much as I do, which is saying a lot) - "biffle". Apparently it is the pronunciation of "BFFL" or Best Friends For Life. I hate what we do to our own language...
bigjeff5 wrote:I'm not sure how common this is, but a chat room I used to frequent ran through the gamut with "welcome back" after someone returns following a "bbs" or "bbl" (be back soon/later). First it was shortened to "wb", which is common enough. Then people started sounding out "wb", which was unwieldy at first but eventually became "wibble". "Wibble" soon became the common response to someone's return to the chat instead of "wb", and eventually the correct response to a "wibble" was "wobble", for no reason other than that it is cute. I actually use "wibble" in conversation with people who I know understand what it means, and usually get a grin and a "wobble" back. It's a fun little inside joke (which may or may not be all that "inside", I have no idea honestly).
zemerick wrote:I was always fond of the "Back" -> "Front" -> "Left" -> "Right" chain, especially when the "Left" and "Right"s come in at the exact same time. No one is ever assigned which one they will say, and it often changes, but somehow it still works out far more often than not. It's likely an odd quirk of (small) crowd behavior.
Azkyroth wrote:zemerick wrote:I was always fond of the "Back" -> "Front" -> "Left" -> "Right" chain, especially when the "Left" and "Right"s come in at the exact same time. No one is ever assigned which one they will say, and it often changes, but somehow it still works out far more often than not. It's likely an odd quirk of (small) crowd behavior.
Do you guys extend it with "Top," "Bottom," and "Pinch" too? ^.^
I only have problems with words that are wrong, like irregardless.
Irregardless isn't a real word.
Unfortunately that isn't what it's taken to mean, being illogically considered synonymous with regardless.
jonadab wrote:I think you're all missing something: the etymology. Irregardless is a type of construction known in the linguistics community as a "crasis" or, less formally, a "portmanteau word", in the same general category as "guesstimate", "smog", "brunch", "spork", "ginormous", and "fantabulous". (Other languages have similar words. The Spanish word "del", for instance, is a crassis of "de" and "el".) "Irregardless" is a combination of "irrespective" and "regardless".
It is NOT an attempt to combine the prefix ir- with the word "regardless"[...]
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