This is hilarious. I suspect a good third of them were made up by whoever sent them in, because I've never heard them. Most of the rest of it is mindless bitching about how, shockingly, a language develops differently in two different places. Oh god, stop the presses.
Treeinthewoods said:
That is pretty hilarious actually. Who the crap says "deplane?" Must be something that doesn't come up in conversation for me.
Shopping trolley my ass! I hope that old man gets trucked by a lorry!
Oh wow, that brings up an Americanism the list has missed...
Anybody notice we use the term "trucked" to imply getting smashed/run over instead of to imply being conveyed by a truck? Does that drive you crazy? I never even thought about it, the phrase has been prevalent since I was in grade school.
I've never heard that. It does sound annoying, though.
The Madman said:
Not all of those are British, though it is a British news source so obviously the majority are. But there are also a couple replies from people in the US itself as well as various other countries.
Besides, it was just a lighthearted article. Some people seem to be taking this wayyyyy too defensively. Hell I agree with the last one myself, were I to have sent one in that would have been the one.
"I could care less!"
I've heard it so often and every time I do it makes me wince. Is it really that hard to add a 'couldn't' in there for the sake of, you know, making sense?
Except that they have different meanings. I couldn't care less means that your caring is zero. It is impossible for there to be an amount of caring less than what you currently experience.
I
could care less (note the emphasis) has a different meaning. There is, indeed, caring less than what I experience now. That said, it's a very small amount of caring. The caring is so minor, that I'm begrudgingly admitting it's existence.
Most people do use it wrong, but half the time it's mentioned is to go on and on about how it doesn't make sense, which is even more annoying. Oh, congratulations, you noticed a common phrase only makes sense with an emphasis people don't use.