Originally posted by Caliban
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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One of these which grate on me is 'showcasing'. In those never-ending trails on Radio 3, they are forever going to 'showcase' a performer. It's also a particularly inapt figure of speech for a radio programme, in an aural rather than a visual medium.Originally posted by ahinton View Post...but surely no more so than describing or referring to any other radio-only broadcast as a "show", which is nothing new?...
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostI would say it is relatively new, when referring to a concert or recital, rather than, say, a visual performance such as ‘The Des O’Connor Show’, and is equally inapt. It's also an example of the assimilation of high culture to popular culture, in the quest for ‘accessibility’, no doubt.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostI very much doubt it, but ahinton has a good head's start over other forum members as his English is already extremely original ...
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scottycelt
Originally posted by ahinton View PostI think that this question has already been answered, scotty and, if you'd not noticed that fact, you've not been paying full attention! That said, I will endeavour to accept your remark as the compliment as which it must surely have been intended!
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Richard Tarleton
The Welsh health minister has just said on TV that her officials are reading the Francis report and that she will be talking to her chairs, which conjures up a lovely image.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThe Welsh health minister has just said on TV that her officials are reading the Francis report and that she will be talking to her chairs, which conjures up a lovely image.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhilst there's undoubtedly no shortage of that kind of thing about, I don't believe that the cap necessarily fits in this instance. I recall hearing an interview with Malcolm Sargent (who's been dead for 45 years) fairly late in his life when asked (as he must have been on several occasions, I imagine) about his "showmanship" and he deflected the question from himself by agreeing that, this week, he was "showing off" Shostakovich but next week he'd be "showing off" Sibelius; now I do not believe that anyone would have felt conscious of this "showing" even if in the audiences at the live events concerned, but there's no doubt that those listening to them on the radio (i.e. the majority of the audience) wouldn't have "seen" anything of it at all. So, if it's really as "inapt" as you believe it to be, it's been so for a very long time and is therefore not at all new.
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handsomefortune
i love reading this thread, it seems so humane (viewed from the platform i'm showcasing from anyway)!
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostOne of these which grate on me is 'showcasing'.
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