Originally posted by Ferretfancy
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Room 101 - what single aspect of modern life should be consigned to oblivion?
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Lateralthinking1
Room 101. I've changed mine.
Neighbours who create a building site on the boundary for a year and don't comply with the requirements set by the Council.
Councils who set requirements, don't enforce them, and when asked to do so repeatedly, don't communicate.
What they know presumably is if it ever went to court, they would blame the perpetrators, the perpetrators would say it was the fault of the Council, and the victims wouldn't be protected at all.
You could see everything you owned subside and the whole country would be against you.
It's started again. Unauthorised work and the Council refusing to comment.
Does anyone have a workable suggestion, ie not arson and murder. Currently I'm apoplectic and I'm playing with my lighter.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostDitto all the other vomit-inducing mutual back-slapping fests. There seems to be one every day.
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Originally posted by Segilla View PostThe use of the word 'egregious'...there is an interesting sidelight. From the OED:-
adjective
1. outstandingly bad; shocking: egregious abuses of copyright
2. archaic: remarkably good.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostA good example of this almost complete reversal of meaning is with the word 'nice', which started out in the 13th Century meaning foolish, silly or wanton. It has also meant ignorant, fussy, pedantic and choosy over the years. Even today, there are many occasions when 'nice' has definite negative connotations.
Silly is another good example - having moved in sense progressively from happy, blissful, fortunate, lucky, spiritually blessed, pious, holy, good, innocent, harmless, deserving compassion, pitiable, miserable, helpless, defenceless, weak, feeble, frail, insignificant, trifling, ailing, foolish, simple, foolish, senseless, empty-headed...
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... a nice distinction, sir!
Silly is another good example - having moved in sense progressively from happy, blissful, fortunate, lucky, spiritually blessed, pious, holy, good, innocent, harmless, deserving compassion, pitiable, miserable, helpless, defenceless, weak, feeble, frail, insignificant, trifling, ailing, foolish, simple, foolish, senseless, empty-headed...
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostA good example of this almost complete reversal of meaning is with the word 'nice', which started out in the 13th Century meaning foolish, silly or wanton. It has also meant ignorant, fussy, pedantic and choosy over the years. Even today, there are many occasions when 'nice' has definite negative connotations.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostAnd of course the change in meaning of 'gay'. Does any teacher now dare to stand up in front of a class of teenagers and read Yeats' poem Lapis Lazuli, with its lines, "All things fall and are built again,/And those that build them again are gay."?
The word 'gay' has been used to denote homosexuality since at least the end of the 19th century before coming into general use, so your comment does come a little late. The real tragedy is that the word has been changed by schoolchildren, not only to deride other, possibly gay children, but to attack anything that they disapprove of. This is the area in which teachers need to act, perhaps by 'daring'to read Yeats to their classes and bringing homophobic bullying out into the open.
Kids in school sometimes target others simply because they are different in some way, and their victims are not necessarily gay, and this causes great misery, sometimes leading to suicide.
I hope you do not think that I am over-reacting, but I remember 'queer hunts' in my own school more than sixty years ago, and it's depressing that so little has changed.
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Ferretfancy, my comment was really only to regret that the relatively modern association of the word 'gay' with homosexuality had obscured its numerous earlier meanings, and that it's now virtually impossible to use the word except in its more limited sense. I think the late C19 usage of 'gay' to mean 'homosexual' was probably confined to America, and that meaning does not appear in the old 1933 Shorter OED which I have - though there are references to its use as 'addicted to social pleasures and dissipations' and 'of immoral life'.
I quite agree with your comments about homophobic bullying. On the other hand, it's also possible to regret a change by which a word which used to have several meanings and associations is reduced to just having one - that seems an imaginative loss to me.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostI think the late C19 usage of 'gay' to mean 'homosexual' was probably confined to America, and that meaning does not appear in the old 1933 Shorter OED which I have
A single aspect of modern life that should be consigned to oblivion: people unknown to me (I think most often women) adding xx at the end of their group emails, tweets, messages of various sorts.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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aeolium
Perhaps it is an imaginative loss that the general meaning of the word 'gay' has been confined to one idea, but it does to a large extent replace other less attractive adjectives. How about a campaign to promote 'jocund'? That's a rather nice Shakespearian word which fits quite a few situations!
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostRoom 101. I've changed mine.
Neighbours who create a building site on the boundary for a year and don't comply with the requirements set by the Council.
Councils who set requirements, don't enforce them, and when asked to do so repeatedly, don't communicate.
What they know presumably is if it ever went to court, they would blame the perpetrators, the perpetrators would say it was the fault of the Council, and the victims wouldn't be protected at all.
You could see everything you owned subside and the whole country would be against you.
It's started again. Unauthorised work and the Council refusing to comment.
Does anyone have a workable suggestion, ie not arson and murder. Currently I'm apoplectic and I'm playing with my lighter.
Remember that developments HAVE, at some point, to pass building regs.......can you pressurise on this aspect?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Or 'bright & cheerful', which is the 50's useage that people who complain about homosexuals hijacking the word are harking back to. A housewife might be advised, in a woman's magazine of the time, to hang some 'gay gingham curtains' to brighten up the kitchen.
Presumably 'batchelor gay' referred to the 'dissipation' meaning.
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