"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". |
Just trying to hone in on the real issues. Sorry about the repeat. Normally I am just shouting into the void, per se. |
I hate this too. |
Let’s take a beat. ESPECIALLY used in a corporate world complex.
Everyone I work with now insists they say it as corporate speak, but no. You heard it on HBO’s Succession as corporate speak. It was not actually corporate speak prior to Succession and I’m convinced it was some sort of mistake like when occasionally you’ll hear a legal Latin expression mispronounced in a lawyer/legal show because the writers obviously aren’t lawyers |
People used that phrase in corporate settings prior to Succession. It's not an uncommon phrase. I noticed a lot of kind of therapy-minded phrases started sneaking into corporate jargon 10-15 years ago, and this is one of them. I also don't mind it because it's almost never a bad idea. Corporate phrases I hate: out of pocket, circle back, deliverable, and random insults about power and hierarchy that reference totally different settings like "oh he's all hat and no cattle" to refer to someone with a big title and but little staff. "Take a beat" doesn't really register. |
VTech |
It is what it is.
Clock it. |