Annoyingly misused words?

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Johnwesleyharding

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Sep 26, 2010
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Nannernade said:
Johnwesleyharding said:
Nannernade said:
When people confuse the words scythe and sai (Sorry if sai is spelled incorrectly) I remember back in 9th grade I had a half hour argument with my teacher about the way you pronounce the word, it is pronounced scy-th people...

scythe
   /saɪð/ Show Spelled [sahyth] Show IPA noun, verb, scythed, scyth·ing.
?noun

I assume you were using a phonetic spelling of scythe. If you were, it represents an incorrect pronounciation.

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
Eh close enough... thanks for the correction though.
That's fine, I'm surprised that you weren't annoyed!
 

floppylobster

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Oct 22, 2008
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ThrobbingEgo said:
floppylobster said:
Literally
Despite what The Oatmeal says, I don't mind when people use "literally" as exaggeration. Think of it as the ultimate in hyperbole - "I was so _____ that this actually happened. No really."

Just because someone asserts something as truth doesn't mean that it is, or is intended that way. Don't take "literally" so literally.
I'm okay with language modification too. So I guess I can file literally under annoyingly overused words instead. My girlfriend's brother says literally, like literally, every third or forth word in a sentence. It literally annoys the crap out of me. Literally.
 

ThrobbingEgo

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Nov 17, 2008
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floppylobster said:
ThrobbingEgo said:
floppylobster said:
Literally
Despite what The Oatmeal says, I don't mind when people use "literally" as exaggeration. Think of it as the ultimate in hyperbole - "I was so _____ that this actually happened. No really."

Just because someone asserts something as truth doesn't mean that it is, or is intended that way. Don't take "literally" so literally.
I'm okay with language modification too. So I guess I can file literally under annoyingly overused words instead. My girlfriend's brother says literally, like literally, every third or forth word in a sentence. It literally annoys the crap out of me. Literally.
Eh, be glad you've got a literate social circle.

Wink wink, nudge nudge.
 

BrownGaijin

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Jan 31, 2009
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I can think of too words that come two mind which are misused to much. And they are right and right.

Oh yeah and two, to, and too.
 

Jellly

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Sep 22, 2010
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Pretty much any internet meme. Cake is a lie was piss annoying especially. Also anything that is overused in forums, like "check your facts before you post stuff and ...INSERT RANDOM ANGRY WORDS".

Also, the word "Derp". Just sounds so...nerdly and cringe worthy.
 

adderseal

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Nov 20, 2009
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Decimated.
Originally it means one in ten is destroyed/killed/remove, whatever. These days people talk about something like an army getting completely annihilated as getting 'decimated'. No it wasn't decimated! If it was decimated it would have suffered 10% losses, more than superficial but not exactly serious!
 

Jellly

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Sep 22, 2010
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adderseal said:
Decimated.
Originally it means one in ten is destroyed/killed/remove, whatever. These days people talk about something like an army getting completely annihilated as getting 'decimated'. No it wasn't decimated! If it was decimated it would have suffered 10% losses, more than superficial but not exactly serious!
I've noticed that as well! Another annoying thing to add to the tally...

I learnt that from reading the Zombie Survival Guide haha, good old reading doing it's thing.
 

Hashime

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Jan 13, 2010
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Well irony for one, people often confuse it with sarcasm,
Semantics
Awesome (is it really fear inspiring?)
Bandwidth
There, Their, and They're - Really, it is not that difficult.
Weight- He ways 68kg - NO, he weighs 667.08N, his mass is 68kg
Heat v.s. temperature
Love - people use it too often
Legitimate - used too often
To, Two, Too - I want to tear people's arms off when they misuse these two terms...oh, wait, there is too too. (or if properly phrased "as well")
Ignorant
-aphobic - Mistaking fear for dislike
As well as many many more.
 

BiscuitTrouser

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May 19, 2008
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Irony. Irony is my pet peeve now, even if it is my favourite form of wit.

Here is not irony.
"hey that guy stole your seat, his name is david too!"
"Thats pretty ironic"
Thats not ironic at all. Its a bit funny, and a tad coincidental but NOT ironic.

Irony: To do something beyond ones own intention. Usually the polar opposite of what you set out to do. Achieving this reversal of ends in the same action.

For example, a fat man eating at mcdonalds crosses to the salad bar across the road to enjoy a healthier lifestyle and extend his lfiespan. He is then hit by a truck full of diet pills. THIS is irony. By trying to extend his lifespan he ironically shortend it.

Putting up a wet floor sign and having people trip over it is ironic, you accidently achieved the oposite of your own intention. Now that is irony!

Verbal irony is a little harder, a vegan liking vampire weekend, meetloaf the band, and other meat named bands is ironic. Its ironic because despite hating meat he has managed to end up literally saying the phrase "i hate meatloaf" which is rather ironic, seeing as he takes immense steps to avoid it.

THERE PEOPLE. READ THIS. KNOW WHAT IRONY IS.
 

kurtzy23

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Aug 26, 2010
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Daystar Clarion said:
AjimboB said:

Seriously, I hate it when people don't know the meaning of irony as well.
Ah Futurama, there always seems to be a reference to everything in that show.
yes that is so annoying one of my freinds keeps saying it it drives me nuts
 

Goro

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Oct 15, 2009
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I, literally, died..
Really? But you're here now, who performed CPR?
What?
You said you literally died. Did you actually die?
No.
*take out bat perform beating*
 

DAJ_

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Apr 4, 2010
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You know what I've been seeing a lot lately that's driving me crazy?

"Lost"

As in "I'm sorry for your lost." Or "Well, it's their lost."

It's loss, you idiots! "I'm sorry for your loss!" You sound like a damn fool when you say it wrong.
 

Nannernade

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May 18, 2009
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Johnwesleyharding said:
Nannernade said:
Johnwesleyharding said:
Nannernade said:
When people confuse the words scythe and sai (Sorry if sai is spelled incorrectly) I remember back in 9th grade I had a half hour argument with my teacher about the way you pronounce the word, it is pronounced scy-th people...

scythe
   /saɪð/ Show Spelled [sahyth] Show IPA noun, verb, scythed, scyth·ing.
?noun

I assume you were using a phonetic spelling of scythe. If you were, it represents an incorrect pronounciation.

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
Eh close enough... thanks for the correction though.
That's fine, I'm surprised that you weren't annoyed!
Well I was a little annoyed, but why make a fool out of myself for such a little mistake? ^^'
 

Ickorus

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Mar 9, 2009
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I don't know if this really counts but I absolutely hate it when people say then instead of than.

Then = A place in time, a proper use would be "Everything was better back then" or "Then he tried to make my Dog lay eggs"

Than = A comparitive statement, a proper use would be "My Chicken can lay eggs faster than your Dog"

Please please please no more of this "I can eat eggs faster then you".
 

Gamblerjoe

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Oct 25, 2010
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Owyn_Merrilin said:
Gamblerjoe said:
Owyn_Merrilin said:
OT: "I could care less" is annoying to me. As has been pointed out a great many times, you could care a great deal, and still be able to care less.
"I could care less" is sarcasm.
Not in the way it's generally used. Most people just use it to mean they couldn't care less without thinking about it. Used properly, there's nothing wrong with the phrase.
Im not sure what you mean by "couldn't care less without thinking about it." How does going from not thinking about something to thinking about it constitute caring less?

At any rate, when i was young, there was just an everyday phrase "I couldn't care less about X." Like many phrases, it got hackneyed and stale. When something becomes common enough, it becomes susceptible to variation. Eventually people started saying "I could care less" but in a thickly sarcastic tone. Eventually that became commonplace, and people started dropping the tone. I have seen this transition occur over the corse of my life, and i couldnt possible be more sure of what i am saying. Maybe this just happened in the region where i grew up and most of the world didnt start hearing it untill it became what it is today. Kind of like the word "wicked."
 

Geekosaurus

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Aug 14, 2010
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interspark said:
the word "gay" as an insult. it insults gays, linguists, the speaker's intelligence but not the actual person being insulted
I wrote a blog about this. And if anybody is keeping score; yes - this is the second shameless plug of the same blog entry in one day:

http://theforceisstrongwithhim.blogspot.com/2010/04/gay-first-post.html

Sampler said:
It really starts to irk me when applied to physical items, "I love this new Black Ops game" - no you don't, you may like it a great deal but you do not love it...
Love (noun)

1. a strong feeling of affection
2. a great interest and pleasure in something
3. [count noun] a person or thing that one loves

It might bother you but it seems they're not doing anything wrong. If, however, you're opposed to the overuse of the word 'love,' in applying it too readily to items that do not deserve such high level of admiration, rather than saying that it cannot be used to describe physical possessions; then sure - I can see why it might grind your gears.

I'm personally not bothered about the misuse of words. That doesn't mean I wont judge you when you do it though.