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Ari wrote:How are either metrics or blogosphere corporate buzzwords?
Kabann wrote:In the last two companies for which I've worked, management has tended to substitute the word metrics whenever they're asking for reports or measurements.
Brooks wrote:Kabann wrote:In the last two companies for which I've worked, management has tended to substitute the word metrics whenever they're asking for reports or measurements.
Ah, that is annoying. Metrics is a fine word, in the business context, when it's used to mean "standards by which we will measure things." Referring to actual measurements as metrics is like saying you'd like a volume of sugar in your coffee or have to drive a distance to your next meeting. Abstraction problems always hurt.
Nimz wrote:Also, I hate all variations of e-mail aside from that one. Unless it begins the sentence or is in an all-caps context, the e must be lowercase. The e isn't smunched up against mail, nor is there a space betwixt them; a hyphen separates them. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
Ari wrote:synaesthetist wrote:i'm also female and not a fan of the word moist. i'd never really known another person who hated that word as much as i did until a friend from college mentioned that it made her want to gag. i'd love to learn more about why women hate that word so much.
Mmm, I've definitely heard of men who don't like the word, too. I've also heard of people who love it, but that's probably because they feel it's about the dirtiest word in the English language.
Drone731 wrote:Ari wrote:synaesthetist wrote:i'm also female and not a fan of the word moist. i'd never really known another person who hated that word as much as i did until a friend from college mentioned that it made her want to gag. i'd love to learn more about why women hate that word so much.
Mmm, I've definitely heard of men who don't like the word, too. I've also heard of people who love it, but that's probably because they feel it's about the dirtiest word in the English language.
Huh, I'd have to say the dirtiest word in the English language award definitely goes to slather, which is much more disgusting in my eyes. That said, I hate neither of them.
I loathe the word quixotic though, as well as Betelgeuse, if that counts, since I always have to remind myself of how to pronounce it. Sort of like epitome, but more annoying because it's seen less often, so it's less rehearsed and whatnot.
Also, I don't really hate the word nonplussed, but I hate the fact that no one I know can EVER use it correctly, seriously.
wisnij wrote:Apparently some people have trouble with "moist". I think it's a funny word.
mrbaggins wrote:Wait, epitome ISN'T EPIsode and TOME?
I'm being serious here.... how is it supposed to sound?
Moist doesn't bother me at all... although I know a few people it does bother.
parallax wrote:mrbaggins wrote:Wait, epitome ISN'T EPIsode and TOME?
I'm being serious here.... how is it supposed to sound?
Moist doesn't bother me at all... although I know a few people it does bother.
eh - pit - oh - mee
Stress on the bold syllable.
mud wrote:panties, i don't like it much, but that's mostly cause i don't use it. and it's kinda creepy.
but one word i just hate (for no rational reason whatsoever, i think it's just the way the word -is-) is lesbian. just hate it.
lowbart wrote:Really? Is that what it's supposed to mean? I always thought (never having looked it up or anything) that it meant dull or boring or nyurrrr.
Maybe that just makes your point even more.
Hephesus wrote:Not so much hate for the word itself as much as its misuse: Literally.
People use literally when they, if fact, mean the opposite.

Koriina wrote:Since "cheese" became a mainstream "random" word, it grates on my ears when anyone who's not making food says it. Even saying we need it from the store hurts.
The language used to be called Sequel. Structured Query Language is simply a backronym that IBM suits invented to avoid a lawsuit from some company that had trademarked the word "sequel". Every time you say "ess queue ell", God feeds a kitten to a corporate lawyer.gruckiii wrote:SQL is not a pronounceable real word. It stands for Structured Query Language. Somehow this is supposed to be pronounced as if it were spelled "Sequel".
Not if it would cause massive confusion. You see, in computer science context, when you say "kar", you mean car.I hear people pronounce this as char as in charbroiled or charred embers. Shouldn't it at least be pronounced like the beginning of the word it represents?
GENERATION 63,728,127: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig and divide the generation number by 2 if it's even, or multiply it by 3 then add 1 if it's odd. Social experiment.clintonius wrote:"You like that, RIAA? Yeah, the law burns, doesn't it?"
gruckiii wrote:I hate words that are pronunciations of acronyms.
Normally we don't pronounce acronyms except when they correspond to a real word. Instead we spell out the letters. Computer Scientists did not get the memo.
Felstaff wrote:I actually see what religion is to social, economical and perhaps political progress in a similar way to what war is to technological progress.
Gunfingers wrote:Voting is the power to speak your mind. You, apparently, had nothing to say.
Annoying words, and Words You Hate
Cryopyre wrote:There's not a single case where "utilize" can't be switched out with "use." I can see "utilize" being used in a sentence where "Use" has been... used to much, like this one.
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