'To be fair'. This meaningless phrase is cropping up at the beginning or end of sentences whatever the subject matter and whoever the speaker. It is driving me up the wall!
Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by LezLee View Post'To be fair'. This meaningless phrase is cropping up at the beginning or end of sentences whatever the subject matter and whoever the speaker. It is driving me up the wall!
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Originally posted by LezLee View Post'To be fair'. This meaningless phrase is cropping up at the beginning or end of sentences whatever the subject matter and whoever the speaker. It is driving me up the wall!
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostIt is rather irritating, and is getting over-used perhaps, but it can be a 'soft' way of putting forward a different opinion,factual correction/addition, point of view in circumstances where that might not otherwise be well received. It avoids flatly contradicting or saying outright someone is wrong.
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Originally posted by LezLee View Post'To be fair'. This meaningless phrase is cropping up at the beginning or end of sentences whatever the subject matter and whoever the speaker. It is driving me up the wall!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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Originally posted by cloughie View PostIs that Zoom influenced?
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Originally posted by Boilk'It is driving me up the wall'. This meaningless phrase is cropping up at the beginning or end of sentences whatever the subject matter and whoever the speaker, to be fair.
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Re To be fair...
To be fair, it does have an authentic and precise application (as French Frank pointed out above) but is certainly tiresome when used as an unthinking filler.
However punctilous we think we are, I suspect most of us have potentially annoying speech habits. I think I probably over-use "actually" which often comes out as "aksherly" or a highly reduced "akshly".
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI use that quite often to balance an argument, like 'on the one hand, on the other'.
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