Originally posted by Lat-Literal
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostPerhaps "a surfeit of emoticonsciousness" or "emoticobsessiveness", clumsy as each are; as one who's more concerned with emotions than emoticonmanship, I trust that my response will appear to be understgandable...I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThe former sounds sexist, so the latter would surely be preferable!
I'd remember his name better if we weren't so pissed whenever we got together!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostIn A Gedda Da Vida, anyone?
I haven't ruled out a couple of Americans but they won't be from that decade.
The knowledge is still too flimsy on the 1960s' blues route!
Originally posted by ahinton View PostPerhaps "a surfeit of emoticonsciousness" or "emoticobsessiveness", clumsy as each are; as one who's more concerned with emotions than emoticonmanship, I trust that my response will appear to be understgandable...
Also, one can "over-emote" but not "over-emoticon" because the latter is a noun. "Emoticonsciousness" is excellent so maybe we could have "over-emoticonsciousness"?
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostEmoticon-manship or emoti-conmanship?
We need something that captures the sheer exuberance of emoticonising and then set it free, albeit in an Oxford dictionary.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 29-10-15, 22:14.
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostYes, I am aware of it even though it's 1968 and I haven't ruled out a couple of Americans but they won't be from that decade.
The knowledge is still too flimsy on the 1960s' blues route!
Thanks ahinton but is it "emottikon" or "emoatikon" or "emoashikon" or "emoatisson" or any of the other many possibilities?
Also, one can "over-emote" but not "over-emoticon" because the latter is a noun. "Emoticonsciousness" is excellent so maybe we could have "over-emoticonsciousness"?
Yes. The criticism of sexism isn't right unless it is also aimed at "human". My concern here is that the first would seek to "outdo" and the second to "mislead".
We need something that captures the sheer exuberance of emoticonising and then set it free, albeit in an Oxford dictionary.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostOr, better still, not bother with emoticons at all, as I seem somehow to have contrived to do with little difficulty for at least as long as they've been in existence!...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBut emoticons can be so helpful when it comes to saying what one wants to say succintly.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostOr even succinctly - but can they, really? They are by definition so generalist and imprecise that "what one wants to say" is unlilkely to be expressed in more than the vaguest of general terms by means of these things...
Oh, thanks for the spelling correction. I'd always spelt it that way without ever checking.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostEmoticonfidencetrickery?
Originally posted by ahinton View PostOr even succinctly - but can they, really? They are by definition so generalist and imprecise that "what one wants to say" is unlilkely to be expressed in more than the vaguest of general terms by means of these things...
Does Twitter have emoticons?
If it doesn't, their introduction could prevent a lot of problems experienced there!
Actually, let's cut to the chase here - it's not a proper word, is it, in the sense that any other word is similarly constructed.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 29-10-15, 23:06.
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