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#226 |
Wizard
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I don't like nouns used as verbs either.
In the aftermath of the shootings in Buffalo I heard some official refer to "funeralizing" the victims. |
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#227 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Watching old reruns of Judge Judy recently. One of the plaintiff’s said…..I was “conversating”with my friends. Judge Judy said. I would normally correct you, but I believe one of the dictionaries has accepted “conversating” as a proper word.
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#228 | |
o saeclum infacetum
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Quote:
However, I’m not consistent; I like some backward formulations. The word “ablute” comes to mind. Still not really a word, as the jagged red line under it indicates. |
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#229 |
Wizard
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I think English has been verbifying nouns for a long time.
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#230 |
Wizard
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Or should that be verbificating?
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#231 |
Grand Sorcerer
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That would technically make "verbifying" a gerund then, right? The noun form of a verbified noun?
My head hurts, now. |
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#233 |
Bibliophagist
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Depends on the dictionary you consult. Using Firefox, Edge and Chrome, switching to British English says it's all fine. 69 million Brits can't be wrong to slightly misquote.
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#234 | |
Bibliophagist
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Quote:
And for what it's worth, verbification and verbify were around in the early 19th century. |
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#235 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I just don't understand why the entire sports world can't hear how utterly stupid the phrase "he left his feet" sounds.
Suggested replacements (in no order of preference) 1) his feet left the ground/floor/ice/bag 2) he jumped in the air Anything is better than a phrase that suggests he went somewhere that his feet did not! I don't know how sportscasters say it (and the vast majority of them do) with a straight face. ![]() |
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#236 |
Obsessively Dedicated...
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Oh--- also “notate” and “commentate”
I understand that these have become acceptable nowadays, but still find them to be awkward and clumsy. When and WHY did “annotate” and “comment” become anathema? ![]() |
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#237 |
null operator (he/him)
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The use of 'more' and 'most' to qualify adjectives rather than using the comparative ('-er') and superlative ('-est') forms.
FX 'more quick' rather than 'quicker', 'most slow' rather than 'slowest'. I thought it was a prolix-prone US trait, but I now hear it all the time on the BBC. And I really mean 'all the time', a commandment must have been issued from on high. Baby sister A(ustralian)BC is on the same path. Stop it! Use not many words when few would serve. BR Last edited by BetterRed; 07-30-2022 at 10:55 PM. |
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#238 |
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#239 |
Wizard
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#240 |
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