• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Supposably and Expecially (excetera, excetera, excetera)

I've yet to figure out how to create this sentence, WITHOUT changing the meaning, and without a double negative:

Don't let me die for nothing.
 
I work in the fundraising industry. Our reps work off a basic script as a guide to ensure that they are keeping close to the message our clients want to send.

These scripts all contain the word "donor" at least once per page.

Yet I continue to hear it warped into "donator" and it drives me up the wall. I don't know where they get it.
 
Yes, the misuse of "like" is agrivating. I file those people away in my mental, person classification system as Airheads.

Two regional ones of these malapropisms I've noticed in the Maryland area with the older folks:

"It aint no way!" (Should be "There...", Aint debate notwithstanding, since I like to use that word incorrectly for effect sometimes)

"It don't make no never-mind to me"
 
^I agree on "ain't".

In the right situations, "Ain't no way, buddy" fits much better than, "I'd really rather not."
 
I've never understood the need to say, "etcetera, etcetra, etcetera" when one "etcetra" is all you'll ever need.
That reminds me: My Brother has the habit of saying, "and so on and et cetera." The worst thing is that he picked it up from a teacher at Zoo Mass, so he says it with an air of intellectualism. :rommie:

And that reminds me of another one: Saying "worse" instead of "worst."

I use to go to church on Sundays.
That's part of the larger problem of dropping the -ed from the end of words. It's often hard to hear them when spoken and fewer and fewer people actually read, so they just don't know that they're there. :rommie:
 
I hate when people add an "'s" to store names -- even those which aren't named after people.

Examples:

Kroger's
Meijer's
Kmart's
Walmart's
 
I want to scream when I see people use an appostrophe before the s when making a word plural.

PEOPLE! Appostrophes are used for only two reasons in the English language: For contractions and to show possession.

Vulcan names have their own rules.
 
The use of "over" and "under" when people are really mean "greater than" or "less than."
 
Quadrilogy is one of my peeves. I still cannot fathom what went through the head of the dumbass who coined that word. Blending is a normal linguistic process/habit. But blending two words coming from two different dead languages for mercantile purposes is way beyond belief!!!
 
Quadrilogy is one of my peeves. I still cannot fathom what went through the head of the dumbass who coined that word. Blending is a normal linguistic process/habit. But blending two words coming from two different dead languages for mercantile purposes is way beyond belief!!!

It worked for television. :p
 
Quadrilogy is one of my peeves. I still cannot fathom what went through the head of the dumbass who coined that word. Blending is a normal linguistic process/habit. But blending two words coming from two different dead languages for mercantile purposes is way beyond belief!!!

That reminds me of this t-shirt on zazzle.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top