Most Bizarre Errors You Constantly See

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Specter Von Baren

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Interesting how this seems to have turned mainly into a thread of pronunciation. But in line with that...... You see this?



You see this thing? It's a Golem. As in, Go-LEM. Go over there and lemme see you pronounce it right. It is not pronounced Gah-lum!

THIS, is a Gah-lum!



Do they look at all similar?! No? Then stop referring to them with the same pronunciation! Just because they use the same consonants doesn't mean that they use and pronounce their vowels the same.
 

Pink Gregory

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Jul 30, 2008
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Specter Von Baren said:


Do they look at all similar?! No? Then stop referring to them with the same pronunciation! Just because they use the same consonants doesn't mean that they use and pronounce their vowels the same.
I have a book on cassette of the Hobbit. In that, it's pronounced "goh-loom". Crazy, crazy world.
 

Terratina.

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May 24, 2012
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Was reminded of it when I saw it today: people calling the Playstation One/Playstation/PS1 the PSX.

Now:

There is a difference. Call a Playstation, or the Playstation One, or even PS1 - it doesn't matter; it's clear you are referring to the first Playstation which was released in '94/'95. While if you call a PSX, I can only assume that you, if you are not Japanese, are not referring to the video recorder which could also play PS2 games, which was never released outside Japan. Oh, and please don't refer to the PS1 as the PSone either.

I know it's horribly pedantic, but the different names refer to different things. *sigh*
 

PoolCleaningRobot

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There's a grammar rule that never see anything, even edited articles follow: when you make a list of things you need a comma before the "and" at the end of the list.

For example: I need milk, butter, eggs, cheese (,) and bread
If you instead say: I need milk, butter, eggs, cheese and bread

You're grouping "cheese and bread" together so there's no pause in the list. There are times when no comma is applicable but I never see it used right. I will never understand why I such a simple rule is never followed
 

Pyramid Head

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I've been in a professional cooking class for a few months now, and it's happened three times now where someone started a grease fire but cooking butter at too high a temperature, once with a classmate, once with someone who took the class before me, and once with my little sister. You'd think the smoke point would be common knowledge among people who cook but i keep seeing people burning butter and olive oil.
 

Queen Michael

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Jun 9, 2009
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PoolCleaningRobot said:
There's a grammar rule that never see anything, even edited articles follow: when you make a list of things you need a comma before the "and" at the end of the list.

For example: I need milk, butter, eggs, cheese (,) and bread
If you instead say: I need milk, butter, eggs, cheese and bread

You're grouping "cheese and bread" together so there's no pause in the list. There are times when no comma is applicable but I never see it used right. I will never understand why I such a simple rule is never followed
Fun fact: The comma you're discussing is called an Oxford comma.
 

rednose1

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Oct 11, 2009
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Every time someone in a movie screams, "The reactor is going CRITICAL!!!!1!!!1ONE!"

Reactors go critical all the time. It's simply the point when neutrons in = neutrons out. It may seems like a simple thing to harp on, but misconceptions like this make it into mainstream, and people start rallying against something (like nuclear power) because of Hollywood lies.
 
Oct 2, 2012
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PoolCleaningRobot said:
There's a grammar rule that never see anything, even edited articles follow: when you make a list of things you need a comma before the "and" at the end of the list.

For example: I need milk, butter, eggs, cheese (,) and bread
If you instead say: I need milk, butter, eggs, cheese and bread

You're grouping "cheese and bread" together so there's no pause in the list. There are times when no comma is applicable but I never see it used right. I will never understand why I such a simple rule is never followed
Not sure about other people but I never use it because I was taught that it was incorrect to put the comma before the "and".
 

PainInTheAssInternet

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Vegosiux said:
Oh yeah another one that really clips my begonias.

"The reactor's going critical!"

Oh, well that's good. Means it's entering its normal operational parameters after all.
I did not know that. Learn something everyday.

I think it's because of popular experience with nuclear technologies; we only ever hear about the bad stuff. Whenever I hear the term, it's inseparable from notions of war (bombs, submarines, etc) or malfunction (Japan's power facilities after the earthquake).

It might also have to do with the term "critical" which we often see in a negative light.
 

Pseudoboss

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PoolCleaningRobot said:
There's a grammar rule that never see anything, even edited articles follow: when you make a list of things you need a comma before the "and" at the end of the list.

For example: I need milk, butter, eggs, cheese (,) and bread
If you instead say: I need milk, butter, eggs, cheese and bread

You're grouping "cheese and bread" together so there's no pause in the list. There are times when no comma is applicable but I never see it used right. I will never understand why I such a simple rule is never followed
Well, according to my AP English teacher, in journalism you're not expected to put a comma before the and in a list because during World War II it was supposed to save lead for bullets.

However, outside of journalism, you are expected to have a comma before the "and."
You're also never expected to use a comma when you have a list of only two items separated by a conjunction, "bacon and eggs" is common, "bacon, and eggs" just looks weird.



My personal peeve is awful swirly fonts that affect legibility.
If you want me to be able to read your sign, you better make it readable. If it's hard to read your sign, then I simply won't bother. I have better things to do.
 

mitchell271

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I've got a few!
- it's pronounced ESSpresso, not expresso
- a scientific theory is more than just an idea. To qualify as a theory, it has to be backed up by empirical data and repeatable experiments
- your computer becoming unresponsive isn't because of a virus, it's because of the 30+ tabs you've got running

When it comes to weird ones though, the worst offender I've seen is vaccines causing autism. How the hell did that even start?!
 

PoolCleaningRobot

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Queen Michael said:
Fun fact: The comma you're discussing is called an Oxford comma.
So there's even a word for it...

Beffudled Sheep said:
Not sure about other people but I never use it because I was taught that it was incorrect to put the comma before the "and".
Well I'm American and was taught at a catholic school so maybe that has something to do with it?

Pseudoboss said:
Well, according to my AP English teacher, in journalism you're not expected to put a comma before the and in a list because during World War II it was supposed to save lead for bullets.

However, outside of journalism, you are expected to have a comma before the "and."
You're also never expected to use a comma when you have a list of only two items separated by a conjunction, "bacon and eggs" is common, "bacon, and eggs" just looks weird.
Well that's one more mystery solved. Sounds like the reason Americans don't use the letter "u" in words like "colour/color". The "u" keys on printing presses would wear out so they stopped using it in words where the "u" wasn't "necessary".

Also the "," is read as pause so a two item list would also sound weird when read
My personal peeve is awful swirly fonts that affect legibility.
If you want me to be able to read your sign, you better make it readable. If it's hard to read your sign, then I simply won't bother. I have better things to do.
One of my reading peeves is the use of serif fonts online. They're annoying to read on monitors because most only have a dpi of about 80
 

Imperioratorex Caprae

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Pyramid Head said:
I've been in a professional cooking class for a few months now, and it's happened three times now where someone started a grease fire but cooking butter at too high a temperature, once with a classmate, once with someone who took the class before me, and once with my little sister. You'd think the smoke point would be common knowledge among people who cook but i keep seeing people burning butter and olive oil.
At least they're not burning water. I love my mother to death, she's one of those types of people who can do pretty much anything they set their mind to.... except cooking. She burned water once boiling it for mac & cheese. I didn't really notice it at the time but now I know why we went out to eat whenever my Dad was out of town.
 

Something Amyss

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Dec 3, 2008
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Spelling errors in the age of autocorrect mostly baffle me, as is the inability to check your spelling even without it. Most means of communication seem to have some way to automatically flag potentially misspelled words. I'm dyslexic. I'm a terrible speller, and I can still make my work legible because I can look for the flags. I'm not perfect, mind, but spellcheckers/spell checkers/spell-checkers often have a lot of missing words. I had to train everything I own not to flag 'okay,' for example.

Ldude893 said:
"Beam Me Up, Scotty" was never an actual quoted line in Star Trek, at least not directly. One high school class I had ridiculed me for saying that, but I guess it's my fault for not forcing them to search up that particular fact up themselves.
Yeah, he comes close to it on a couple occasions, but....

Similarly with adding "Luke" to "I am your father."

It would make the scene rather silly. Sillier than a George Lucas ass-pull.

Little Woodsman said:
Where I live it's people not understanding that 'Hispanic' and 'Mexican' are *not* interchangeable terms! Drives me up the wall...
I'm American, so that's just about everywhere. Even quite frequently amongst Hispanics/Latinos.
Lovely Mixture said:
Frankenstein is not the name of the monster, it's the name of the doctor. How the hell did this error begin in the first place?
If we're going to be specific, Frankenstein was the monster. He just wasn't the creation.

Yes, I know this is arguable, but think about the actions of the two in the original stories. He was hardly this shambling beast.

thaluikhain said:
Was not the creature called "Adam"? Presumably Adam Frankenstein, named after his "dad", though.
Shelley referred to him as 'Adam,' and he was referred to as 'Adam' in the poetic sense, but he's never outright named in the book.
 

Alakaizer

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The big one I can think of is "drownd/drwonded." It makes me feel like I'm about to puke. It's drown and drowned. I've never seen it, but I've heard it way too often, and there is no damned excuse for it. It's a lot like "expresso" and "excape." BLARG.
 

soren7550

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Dec 18, 2008
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mitchell271 said:
When it comes to weird ones though, the worst offender I've seen is vaccines causing autism. How the hell did that even start?!
That's because someone managed to have a false report printed in a medical journal saying that they did. Think it was back in the 80s this happened, and if I remember right it was discredited not too long after, but people tend to not remember that part.

Penn & Teller had an episode of Bullshit on it, and I'd link it, but since it has some nudity in it I think, I can't. Will post a censored one if I find it.

OT: One for me is when people call the Medal of Honor the Congressional Medal of Honor. It's not awarded by Congress, therefore it can't be called the Congressional Medal of Honor. From what I can recall, Congress has absolutely no involvement whatsoever when it comes to the medal.
 

dolfan1304

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May 18, 2009
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How most people use Hercules when talking about Greek mythology, when its actually Heracles and Hercules is the Roman version.
 

Allar

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mitchell271 said:
- it's pronounced ESSpresso, not expresso
So much this. I'm a barista and while I realize that it's a common and easy mistake to make it still grinds on me every time. Also, I'm sincerely baffled by how many Americans insist that their form of government is a republic rather than a democracy even though those are in no way exclusive terms.

Probably the most serious gripe I have is how many people talk about the Middle East as though it's been a conflict-ridden hellhole since time immemorial and that everybody should just leave the people of the region to their own devices "because they're never going to stop anyway." It completely ignores that most of the issues they're talking about have their genesis in the early 20th century after the end of World War I. Not that it's been a utopian, conflict-free paradise either, it's just that the people talking about how violent the Middle East is never seem to remember that the various states of Europe were perpetually at each other's throats until VERY recently.
 
Oct 2, 2012
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PoolCleaningRobot said:
Beffudled Sheep said:
Not sure about other people but I never use it because I was taught that it was incorrect to put the comma before the "and".
Well I'm American and was taught at a catholic school so maybe that has something to do with it?
Maybe. I'm American too and was taught primarily in poor public schools.