That doesn't seem that weird to me. I have noticed that I am way more likely to call my kid "sweetie" if something is wrong (they are sick or come home upset from school, etc.) because it's a way of conveying that I'm concerned about them. I think this is really common for parents. |
thee-ter (instead of the-a-ter) |
My ILs are from a rural part of "Pennsyltucky" and they speak this way. I don't hold it against them personally because I know it's just how they were raised and they don't really know another way to speak. But I will admit when we are visiting them, it starts to really wear on my nerves after a day or two and I'm so relieved when we go back home and people speak properly. The experience has made me aware of how fortunate it is to grow up in a more cosmopolitan place, and has also made me really admire the degree to which my spouse had to learn an entirely new culture and language in order to go to succeed in college and his career. |
It is what it is. |
Do you mean THEE-uh-ter, the way Brits pronounce it, or thee-ATE-er, the way some southerners pronounce it (like vee-HICK-el, same cadence)? I find pronouncing it the British way if you aren't British to be pretentious, and the southern way sounds just plain wrong unless that's your natural accent. But the real question is whether you spell it theater or theatre. My high school theatre teacher used the -re spelling, so I do it now instinctively, and sometimes people yell at me for it. |
Wait, how do you pronounce it if not THEE-uh-ter? I'm 100% American and I think I pronounce it this way. |
"Speaking out" in any context other than a whistleblower complaint. So overused.
"Go in with" in cooking or makeup tutorials. As in "now we go in with the garlic powder" or "now you can go in with the liner." |
I'm a horse girl and I thought this was an equestrian thing. I call every horse, dog, cat, and child I encounter "bud." It is unconscious. I don't have the mental energy it would take to break this habit. |
Talk to someone over 60 about their knees. It will come up. |
Many Americans just say THEE-ter. THEE-uh-ter is more correct but the other pronunciation is so common that it's no longer wrong. |
"It's giving xyz" energy. I hate "giving" used that way. Ugh!
It's giving Taylor Swift. It's giving old man wearing tweed. Ugh and ugh. |
"Per se," which is used incorrectly about 99% of the time.
"Hone in on." I almost get hives when I hear this. It is "home in," as in on a target. Hone is a different word. I think that it is finally accepted because the misuse was so rampant, but it still makes you sound illiterate. |
All stop.
It is what it is. |
Just the tip. |
You've complained about this before "on here". |