Originally posted by LMcD
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostHolland–Dozier–Holland to you too!
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostI heard a DJ in recent years say that he had to interview the brothers Brian and Eddie Holland. He was told that one brother had had a sleepless night with toothache - he said he wasn't sure which one, but when he interviewed them he would be sure to find out which was the dozier Holland.
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I suppose this (from a usually serious website) is important, but I'm blowed if I understand quite what it means:
"Emmy award-winning actress and trans rights activist Laverne Cox is leveraging her incredibly intersectional lived experience to demand diversity in medical research in the piece below."
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI suppose this (from a usually serious website) is important, but I'm blowed if I understand quite what it means:
"Emmy award-winning actress and trans rights activist Laverne Cox is leveraging her incredibly intersectional lived experience to demand diversity in medical research in the piece below."
I sometimes wonder to what extent bad decisions are made because the verbiage the decision-makers are supposed to plough through before making the decision is so offputting/confusing/plain unintelligible that important facts are completely missed because much/most of the text simply isn't read. So long as key phrases and on trend words appear on skim through it is assumed the substance is OK.
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In an email just received from my old college, the new Principal describes a former (female) student as an alum.
I always thought that alum was an aluminium potassium sulphate (particularly useful as an ingredient of a styptic pencil), but presumably the college is now 'reaching out' to those who don't want to identify as an alumnus or an alumna.
Whatever next?
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostIn an email just received from my old college, the new Principal describes a former (female) student as an alum.
I always thought that alum was an aluminium potassium sulphate (particularly useful as an ingredient of a styptic pencil), but presumably the college is now 'reaching out' to those who don't want to identify as an alumnus or an alumna.
Whatever next?
Is it acceptable to use alum for alumnus or alumna?
Noun (2)
The words that we have used to refer to people who have attended or graduated from a school, college, or university have changed a bit over the past several centuries. Traditionally, the word alumnus has been used to refer to a single male, whereas alumna has been used for a single woman. Initially, the plural forms were alumni to refer to multiple men (or multiple men and women) and alumnae for multiple women. A little over a hundred years ago the shortened form of alum began to be used to describe a graduate or past attendee of either gender. Although many people feel that alum is informal, it is in increasing use, and we appear to be moving toward a greater acceptance of the word. The plural of alum is alums.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostFrom the Merriam-Webster definition:
Yes: I see from my (hardback) Merriam-Webster that the use dates from 1910.
I didn't think of looking it up anywhere, imagining it to be a C21 woke-era neologism.
I'd better get used to being an alum then.
50 years this year since I went up to college, and of course celebrations are on hold: possibly no great loss, as college sherry was always grim, and I don't imagine that it has improved much in the meantime!
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostIn an email just received from my old college, the new Principal describes a former (female) student as an alum.
I always thought that alum was an aluminium potassium sulphate (particularly useful as an ingredient of a styptic pencil), but presumably the college is now 'reaching out' to those who don't want to identify as an alumnus or an alumna.
Whatever next?
Like many buzz words or phrases the usage of 'reaching out' is certainly on the rise.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostInteresting: thanks!
Yes: I see from my (hardback) Merriam-Webster that the use dates from 1910.
I didn't think of looking it up anywhere, imagining it to be a C21 woke-era neologism.
I'd better get used to being an alum then.
50 years this year since I went up to college, and of course celebrations are on hold: possibly no great loss, as college sherry was always grim, and I don't imagine that it has improved much in the meantime!
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI suppose this (from a usually serious website) is important, but I'm blowed if I understand quite what it means:
"Emmy award-winning actress and trans rights activist Laverne Cox is leveraging her incredibly intersectional lived experience to demand diversity in medical research in the piece below."
Leverage/leveraging always annoys me, ever coming across it some years ago used in financial jargon - when one was pretty sure a perfectly acceptable word existed already - in order to keep the hoi polloi out.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostFrom the Merriam-Webster definition: "alum ... used to describe a graduate or past attendee of either gender ..."
PS I thought Alum referred to a rather good actor (may be spelt differently).
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI suppose it could be a typo of intersexual, though of course I could be fringing on non-PC territory here...
Leverage/leveraging always annoys me, ever coming across it some years ago used in financial jargon - when one was pretty sure a perfectly acceptable word existed already - in order to keep the hoi polloi out.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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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostDisturbing that such an august source uses the dubious "attendee" for someone who attends. The suffix "ee", based on the French past participle ending, denotes having the verb done to you, as in "employee" as against "employer", some one who does the employing. Likewise, "payee", "interviewee" etc. A person cannot be attended. "Standee" is an even worse aberration of this type.
PS I thought Alum referred to a rather good actor (may be spelt differently).
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