Originally posted by vinteuil
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... there are many such. I like Saint Epney, Saint Evenage, the new town built on the minster of St Ur - and of course the ford of St Rat. We currently don't talk about the town renamed in the honour of St Alin...
Not forgetting of course St Ockwell (originally St Ock's Well so I'm led to believe), St Rand or St Aine's.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostA particularly loathsome locution of recent provenance....
Possibly also related to upspeak? (See what I did there?)
(So you find that loathsome? )
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostAgreed - but, this is common in US English e.g. You're going out like that? I associate this form with 'immigrant' usage, possibly Yiddish in origin - but would welcome correction.
Possibly also related to upspeak? (See what I did there?)
(So you find that loathsome? )
(See what I did just then? )
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostAgreed - but, this is common in US English e.g. You're going out like that? I associate this form with 'immigrant' usage, possibly Yiddish in origin - but would welcome correction.
Possibly also related to upspeak? (See what I did there?)
(So you find that loathsome? )
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I've always thought 'upspeak' came from people who had learnt English by watching Australian soaps in the late 20th century. I've heard it referred to also as 'the Australasian interrogative'. It's often used by people who use what I call 21st -century pronunciation:
'Gid, Kick , and Lik' instead of 'Good, cook, and book'. Every Friday Anita Rani says 'gid morning' to her listeners on 'Woman's Hour'.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostNot setting me on edge perhaps, but I'm fascinated by the rise of "the counterfactual". Useful expression really until the politicians caught the bug..... Liz Truss used it in her recent Self-Justification Tour of The Media........
So much for the Oxford PPE course.
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I see from digging through this forum that "curated" was identified some years ago as a verbal annoyance. I would like to report that it is still going strong - heard this morning during the Breakfast programme in a trailer for some for some forthcoming event.
My current bugbear is actually more of a newspaper phenomenon: the reinvention of "trove" as a noun. According to my sources, it has only one common use - in the phrase "treasure trove" where it comes from the old French word meaning "found" (similar to the past participle of modern French trouver).
The latest "trove" to come on the scene is the large collection of American secret documents.
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Originally posted by letterreader202 View PostMy current bugbear is actually more of a newspaper phenomenon: the reinvention of "trove" as a noun. According to my sources, it has only one common use - in the phrase "treasure trove" where it comes from the old French word meaning "found" (similar to the past participle of modern French trouver).
The latest "trove" to come on the scene is the large collection of American secret documents.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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