I used the word "rip-off" in the sense of that's how I felt because I've no incentive to watch something I've basically already seen twenty years ago when it was raw and fresh.
I used the word "rip-off" in the sense of that's how I felt because I've no incentive to watch something I've basically already seen twenty years ago when it was raw and fresh.
Actually, he's using the word in its correct sense: something that's a bad deal for the consumer.I used the word "rip-off" in the sense of that's how I felt because I've no incentive to watch something I've basically already seen twenty years ago when it was raw and fresh.
Which doesn't make it any less an abuse of the word, a word that is obnoxiously overused and abused in general. Words are not meaningful if used incorrectly, and that is simply not what the word "ripoff" means.
Not really, since it's aimed at the UK market, which while we have the US Law & Order series, they tend to be on the less watch channels, where as Law & Order UK is on the most watched commercial channel in the country.Actually, he's using the word in its correct sense: something that's a bad deal for the consumer.I used the word "rip-off" in the sense of that's how I felt because I've no incentive to watch something I've basically already seen twenty years ago when it was raw and fresh.
Which doesn't make it any less an abuse of the word, a word that is obnoxiously overused and abused in general. Words are not meaningful if used incorrectly, and that is simply not what the word "ripoff" means.
I used the word "rip-off" in the sense of that's how I felt because I've no incentive to watch something I've basically already seen twenty years ago when it was raw and fresh.
Which doesn't make it any less an abuse of the word, a word that is obnoxiously overused and abused in general. Words are not meaningful if used incorrectly, and that is simply not what the word "ripoff" means.
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