Moderators: gmalivuk, Moderators General, Prelates
Oflick wrote:Throngs.
I don't know why, it just never looks or sounds natural to me.
this isn't my cowMighty Jalapeno wrote:I feel like you're probably an ocelot, and I feel like I want to eat you. Feeling is fun!
hifi wrote:Don't know if anyone's mentioned these
Monika wrote:Kiss: 12 posts.
hifi wrote:Blasé (it's impossible to say this without sounding pretentious)
Felstaff wrote:hifi wrote:Blasé (it's impossible to say this without sounding pretentious)
Oh that is so passée.
hifi wrote:Blasé (it's impossible to say this without sounding pretentious)
Ephemeron wrote:Digital download
I hate it. Companies say it to make something sound gimmicky. Have you ever heard of a non-digital download? No? Then stop saying it!
gmalivuk wrote:It takes digital input instead of analog input. Seems fine to call it digital.

bigglesworth wrote:And at that moment all men and boys around the world activated their second, secret, penis.
doogly wrote:murder is a subset of being mean
Pfhorrest wrote:As someone who is not easily offended, I don't really mind anything in this conversation.
Fire Brns wrote:narcicist and related words, just so...gah!
Eebster the Great wrote:Fire Brns wrote:narcicist and related words, just so...gah!
I think the name Narcissus would be pretty nice if not for the mythology surrounding it.
Pfhorrest wrote:As someone who is not easily offended, I don't really mind anything in this conversation.
Fire Brns wrote:Eebster the Great wrote:Fire Brns wrote:narcicist and related words, just so...gah!
I think the name Narcissus would be pretty nice if not for the mythology surrounding it.
I agree on that point but with the "ist" at the end all that pops into my minnd is a high and mighty pustule. Plus it is thrown around so much that it has lost validity.
These are dialect differences, so you merely have an aesthetic preference.dunstergirl wrote:amongst (used at least once in this thread, use among) and whilst (use while). Seriously.
It is if people use it as one. And people do. So it is.I concur with a previous post about "transition" as a verb, it is NOT.
Anything, alive or not, can grow. Grow only means increase in size. I agree that "be grown" is different, but that it can apply to anything intentionally grown, such as crystals.Please don't talk about growing anything besides plants. As in "grow the economy" etc. Only things that are alive can grow/be grown.
No, "observationalist" means someone who favors observation, while "observer" means someone who observes.Finally, in the jargon department - an "observationalist" is the same as an "observer" and the latter saves space.
dunstergirl wrote:amongst (used at least once in this thread, use among) and whilst (use while). Seriously.
Gear wrote:I'm not sure if it would be possible to constantly eat enough chocolate to maintain raptor toxicity without killing oneself.
gmalivuk wrote:These are dialect differences, so you merely have an aesthetic preference.dunstergirl wrote: amongst (used at least once in this thread, use among) and whilst (use while). Seriously.
dunstergirl wrote: I concur with a previous post about "transition" as a verb, it is NOT.
gmalivuk wrote:It is if people use it as one. And people do. So it is.
dunstergirl wrote: Please don't talk about growing anything besides plants. As in "grow the economy" etc. Only things that are alive can grow/be grown.
gmalivuk wrote:Anything, alive or not, can grow. Grow only means increase in size. I agree that "be grown" is different, but that it can apply to anything intentionally grown, such as crystals.
dunstergirl wrote: Finally, in the jargon department - an "observationalist" is the same as an "observer" and the latter saves space.
gmalivuk wrote:No, "observationalist" means someone who favors observation, while "observer" means someone who observes.
dunstergirl wrote:"Global warming" fails to describe the situation, please use "climate change" instead and I prefer impact as a noun tho correct to use as a verb, it pisses me off.
Zarq wrote:I now have a newfound fear of mimes appearing above me. ThanksObamaKewangji!
And that's fine. I took issue with your post as a whole, though, because a bunch of the other stuff you said was declarations about what's correct or incorrect in English.dunstergirl wrote:The thread was "annoying words and words you hate," not whether they should be allowed or not. I get that the "st" form is used more frequently in some places (chiefly Britain) than others, it just sounds pretentious to me.
It's not a matter of what should be, but what is. If "alot" eventually becomes one word outside of informal or typo situations, what would make it different from "another"? There are plenty of words you use every day that are the way they are because people in the past made mistakes that caught on.dunstergirl wrote:Unfortunate, but true. An old HS teacher of mine argues that the language is always changing so I should relax and get over it already. One could then argue (based on your argument and his) that "alot" should be a word. NOT.
Care to provide any examples of this? Every time I can remember seeing the word it has been decidedly not as a synonym for "observer". Are you sure you're understanding it correctly?dunstergirl wrote:OK, so the next time I see it used in the proper context (bahahah) I'll let it stand. Most scientists involved with climate observations (i.e., measurements) and related disciplines use it as a synonym for "observer," which pisses me off.gmalivuk wrote:No, "observationalist" means someone who favors observation, while "observer" means someone who observes.
Was he only concerned with wind, or was he potentially interested in other forms of turbulent mechanical stress? Was he concerned with all types and speeds of wind in general, to have warranted using such a vague word? I agree that jargon sometimes gets out of hand, especially on occasions when scientists are ostensibly writing for a lay audience, but other times it's necessary for the far greater accuracy and precision it offers. You yourself prefer "climate change" to "global warming", because it's more accurate, while people who don't actually get it often think it must just be a weasely change for scientists to cover their asses when AGW finally gets exposed as a giant environmentalist hoax.When I was in grad school a fellow student used the words "turbulent mechanical stress" in a grant application to describe "wind."
Good job missing the point. Language change doesn't mean there aren't conventions and different registers and expectations of certain levels of formality. Any more now than it has over the previous millennium and a half of changing English.dunstergirl wrote:So next document I edit I should let it all go because the language is changing all the time?
dunstergirl wrote:O and my friend's grant application was specific to the effects of "turbulent mechanical stress" (i.e., wind) on trees.
dunstergirl wrote:I concur with a previous post about "transition" as a verb, it is NOT.
Please don't talk about growing anything besides plants. As in "grow the economy" etc. Only things that are alive can grow/be grown.

bigglesworth wrote:And at that moment all men and boys around the world activated their second, secret, penis.
doogly wrote:murder is a subset of being mean

bigglesworth wrote:And at that moment all men and boys around the world activated their second, secret, penis.
doogly wrote:murder is a subset of being mean
nbilyk wrote:I would agree that "moist" is one of the most uncomfortable non-vulgar words. If you count vulgar words, "queef" would be at the top of the list. You can't even say queef without feeling weird about it.
Return to Language/Linguistics
Users browsing this forum: Choittetet, Slageammalymn and 3 guests