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Can We Talk? A Brief List of Annoying Expressions and Verbal Fumbles
Archdiocese of Washington ^ | 01-18-18 | Msgr. Charles Pope

Posted on 01/19/2018 7:47:16 AM PST by Salvation

Can We Talk? A Brief List of Annoying Expressions and Verbal Fumbles

January 18, 2018

100213

We all have certain phrases that annoy us; oddities creep into the language that invite comment or could use correction. To that end, I propose below a list of ten annoying and/or misused words and expressions.

Please accept this list in the humorous vein in which it is intended. I am playing the role of an irritated curmudgeon, but it’s just my shtick. Have some fun with me as I complain and then feel free to add to my list.

So, can we talk? He’s my list of annoyances.

1. “With all due respect …” This phrase is typically followed by something that isn’t going to respect the recipient at all! When you open an e-mail and it begins, “With all due respect, Mr. Jones, …,” don’t you just wince at what you just know is coming? In a way, the expression is a form of lip service. It’s a way of saying, “I want to dispense with that silly tradition of having to accord you a modicum of respect and get on to what’s really on my mind, namely, that you’re wrong and probably clueless as well.”

2. Decimate Today the word has come to mean “to destroy completely.” For example, “Our culture has been decimated by no-fault divorce.” The original meaning, to reduce something by a tenth, has been relegated to a secondary definition in many dictionaries. The word came from the Roman practice in which, after conquering a town that was guilty of some sort of uprising, the Romans would line up all the men of that town in the public square, and kill every tenth one. In effect, the message was, “This is what you get if you mess with us. It’ll be worse next time.” Alas, trying to recover the original meaning of this word may be a lost cause at this point. It may be destined to go the way of other Latin-based words such as “manufacture,” the literal meaning of which is handmade (manu = hand, facere = to make). Today something referred to as manufactured is typically not handmade. There are other English words that seem to have reversed meanings. For example, we drive on parkways and park on driveways.

3. ServiceThere is a tendency today to take the noun “service” and turn it into a verb. It is common to hear someone say, “We service our clients.” or, “We serviced fifty people last month.” No! People are served, not serviced. Perhaps you may speak of a car as being serviced, but people are served. It’s hard to know where this manner of speaking came from, but I suspect it crept in from the world of prostitution, where prostitutes often speak of “servicing” their “Johns” (i.e. clients). We do not service people, we serve them; people are not serviced they are served.

4. Not unlike This strange expression, in a way, cancels itself out as a double negative. For example, someone may say, “This car is not unlike that one.” If you put a few of those sorts of expressions into a sentence, trying to figure out exactly what the sentence means can make your head explode. In fact, it strains the meaning of the word “sentence,” which refers to a string of words that makes sense. Unless the person misspoke, this seems to just be a fancy way of saying, “This car is like that one.” Try to avoid making heads explode by not using the expression, “not unlike.”

5. Proactive – This is another strange word that has crept into our vocabulary. How is “proactive” different from active? One might argue that there’s a temporal dimension here: one who is “proactive” is one who is ahead of his time. To be honest, I’m not sure what is meant when someone is called “a proactive person.” I think it is a compliment, in that the person is “ahead of the curve” or something, but it’s just not all that clear to me — but maybe I’m just being reactive.

6. Utilize Why not just say “use”? This oddity seems to be waning in usage, and not a moment too soon as far as I’m concerned. I live for the day when we no longer use “utilize” things.

7. Intellectually dishonest How is being “intellectually dishonest” different from being just plain dishonest? Is not honesty or dishonesty rooted in the intellect and manifested in speech? I’ve never heard other qualifiers attached; I haven’t heard of physical dishonesty or verbal dishonesty. “You’re being intellectually dishonest” seems to me to be just a highfalutin’ way of saying “You’re being dishonest.”

8. Dialogue Why not just say “discussion”? Instead of saying, “I’m having a dialogue with him,” why not just say, “I’m having a discussion with him”? An even more egregious abuse of this word is to “verbify” it: “Let’s dialogue about this problem.” Why not just say, “Let’s discuss this problem?” Even worse is “We’re dialoguing about this issue” instead of “We’re discussing this issue.” Turning nouns into verbs or verb forms generally produces strange results. To quote a classic line from Calvin and Hobbes, “Your verbing is weirding me out.” So, let’s talk; let’s have a discussion, but let’s limit our usage of the noun “dialogue” and certainly avoid using it as a verb or using the strange construction “dialoguing.”

9. Using “so” as an interjection I have seen this most often in academic settings. Typically, the word “so” tends to be placed at the beginning of the answer to a question. For example, “What do the data show in relation to this problem?” The response might be, “So … the data seem to indicate that things are going to get worse.” (People sometimes use an interjection as a delaying tactic while feverishly formulating an answer in their head, but that’s not the usage to which I’m objecting.) In this case, though, I’m suspicious that it is emblematic of the relativistic climate that pervades today’s academic settings. The interjection “So …,” expressed gently and slowly, seems rather more designed to make the person seem thoughtful and somehow not arrogantly certain of what he is about to say. So … I don’t want to come off is too nasty, but would you please stop saying “so” all the time?

10. “Are you suggesting …?” This is a preamble to a question and is often used by members of the mainstream media to indicate incredulity at an outlandish statement or position. A reporter writing a piece on the Catholic Church might ask me, “Are you suggesting that people who don’t follow the teachings of the Church are in error?” There’s a part of me that wants to answer, “I’m not suggesting anything; I’m saying it outright!” Here, too, the relativistic climate rears its head. People don’t say things or claim things; they “suggest” them. Let me be clear: as one not heavily influenced by relativism, I can say that when I am asked a question, I state an answer. I do not “suggest” an answer—and neither should you, at least when it comes to faith or morals. Do not suggest the faith, say it. Say what you mean and mean what you say, but don’t say it mean.

OK, can we talk? This is my short list; what do you want to add?


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; english; general
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To: Gideon7

14. Spelling looser incorrectly as loser


61 posted on 01/19/2018 8:34:49 AM PST by 1Old Pro
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To: MeganC
I hate when someone says to me, “Look...” as they’re trying to make a point or explain something. It makes me feel like they’re exasperated with me or that they think I’m stupid. In any case, when someone says this to me I’m pretty much done listening to anything they have to say.

Listen, if you're going to have that attitude...

Regards,

62 posted on 01/19/2018 8:34:52 AM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: Fightin Whitey

All I know is that back in the day we never said BACK IN THE DAY!!!
= = = = = = = = = =
Didn’t ‘adults’ say ‘In my day......’

and

Did YOU ever believe you would be using the term

‘Turn of the century’?

Everytime I ‘use’ it I preface it with “I don’t believe I am saying this”......

Now we can use a rerun of the ‘20s...Flappers and all..


63 posted on 01/19/2018 8:36:17 AM PST by xrmusn ((6/98)""In todays world:::WE, THE USofA are Rudyard Kiplings 'Tommy'")
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To: Salvation
GOING FORWARD
64 posted on 01/19/2018 8:36:37 AM PST by DoodleBob
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To: TheNext

Just sayin’.


65 posted on 01/19/2018 8:37:17 AM PST by JusPasenThru (It is OK to be white.)
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To: caligatrux

‘...”So” as an interjection.’

The use of ‘so’ or a similar word as an interjection is very old in the English language. The very first word in the Old English poem “Beowulf” is ‘Hwat!’, which is used much like ‘So!’. Some times, poets and writers used ‘Lo!’ in the same way.


66 posted on 01/19/2018 8:37:17 AM PST by VietVet
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To: Salvation

moving forward


67 posted on 01/19/2018 8:38:36 AM PST by morphing libertarian (Build Kate's Wall)
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To: Fiji Hill
How about the way "massive" has morphed to mean very large?

A hydrogen atomic nucleus is massive, an earthquake, regardless of it's strength, is not.

68 posted on 01/19/2018 8:38:55 AM PST by misanthrope (Sinister deplorable)
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To: MayflowerMadam

It’s definitely a lib thing, and often when they have no answers but are trying to shake down or guilt trip the American people anyway.

My pet peeve is, who the heck turned the word “ask” into a noun?!
“The ASK is that we get this done by the end of the week.”
Grrr.


69 posted on 01/19/2018 8:40:01 AM PST by GnuThere
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To: 1Old Pro

I routinely use “looser” in the place of “loser” and almost no one catches it. It’s one of those things.


70 posted on 01/19/2018 8:40:03 AM PST by JusPasenThru (It is OK to be white.)
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To: Salvation

national conversation

We need a national conversation on race (presumably to straighten out all the peckerwoods. and support BLM)


71 posted on 01/19/2018 8:40:39 AM PST by morphing libertarian (Build Kate's Wall)
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To: alexander_busek

LOL!


72 posted on 01/19/2018 8:41:30 AM PST by MeganC (There is nothing feminine about feminism.)
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To: grobdriver

Try packing a picnic lunch and inviting a friend out saying, “I’m just feeling gay today”. (watch friend run the other way)
= = = = = = = = =

Then again, if the ‘friend’ smiles coyly and giggles you may not know him/her as well as you think you do....<: <: <:


73 posted on 01/19/2018 8:41:51 AM PST by xrmusn ((6/98)""In todays world:::WE, THE USofA are Rudyard Kiplings 'Tommy'")
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To: JusPasenThru

I use Luzr. Easier to text.


74 posted on 01/19/2018 8:42:04 AM PST by Lurkina.n.Learnin (Wisdom and education are different things. Don't confuse them.)
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To: Salvation

“empower women”

Empower women is really giving external power to something that should be internal. And with legal equality and natural power who is more powerful than woman anyway.


75 posted on 01/19/2018 8:42:11 AM PST by morphing libertarian (Build Kate's Wall)
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To: Lurkina.n.Learnin

You cis-gendered sorts are inflicting microaggression.


76 posted on 01/19/2018 8:42:58 AM PST by JusPasenThru (It is OK to be white.)
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To: Salvation

Radicalized is a passive verb that takes away responsibility of the person who committed the terrorist act and ascribes it to external forces. Any terrorist acting alone in the US has been referred to as radicalized.


77 posted on 01/19/2018 8:43:32 AM PST by morphing libertarian (Build Kate's Wall)
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To: Bob

“for all intensive purposes...”

This is a mis-spelling, or mis-pronounciation, of “for all intents and purposes”, and indicates to me that the speaker/writer is trying to pontificate above their level of education/intelligence. Another which grates on my eyes and ears is to “hone in on” when they appear to mean “to home in on.”


78 posted on 01/19/2018 8:43:38 AM PST by VietVet
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To: Salvation
Democrat An antiquated idealistic concept that actually referred to someone who follows the will of the people. A public official supporting democracy. Put to lie decades ago.
79 posted on 01/19/2018 8:45:02 AM PST by morphing libertarian (Build Kate's Wall)
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To: sneakers

Yesssss! “Reached out to” has crept into business language in a way that’s irritating. I believe the intent is to soften an approach, to make it seem that the described communication is done with compassion, with caring. But the opposite is acheived. My department reached out to security and asked for more coverage. Instead it was actually- we told security to make more patrols of property.

The goal seems to be making life a continual and subtle softening of boundaries or rules.

Reach out to me if you agree:)


80 posted on 01/19/2018 8:45:09 AM PST by SE Mom (Screaming Eagle mom)
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