People at the gym who
1) sweat a lot all over their treadmills, etc. and don't wipe it up 2) stake out a spot (usually in a nice place) and lay all their stuff out (mat, towel, etc.) while they work out elsewhere 3) stash a used paper towel or wet wipe in a cupholder on a piece of equipment and then leave it there for someone else to dig out and throw away |
Although I would argue that my anger in this situations is entirely rational. |
Did he go to Oxford or Cambridge? It's like a sausage machine that takes people with different accents and spits out people with identical RP voices. A friend was there for 3 years and lost her accent and makes fun of the fact that I still have my country's accent (as do the rest of her family). |
I irrationally hate all televised sports. They are so loud, the announcers screaming, the fans, whistles blowing, crowds chanting, whatever it is. I'd rather have quiet in my small house but the tv is always on sports and I can hear it from anywhere. |
Book banning.
If you want to monitor/control what your own kids read, go for it! It's all good. But there's no reason for you to monitor or control what OTHER kids or people read. And let's face it...kids sneak what they really want to read. There was a copy of Judy Blume's Forever that made the rounds on the sly when I was in middle school. I also read Flowers in the Attic in 7th grade and ended up as a normal, functioning adult. |
This is nuts but GLUTEN! I get so grumpy and irrationally angry. |
Hilaria Baldwin says hold mi cervesa |
This is the way I learned it as well. |
The other issue is moms with multiple children. Moms need to actively instruct their kids to step aside in these situations. But they don't. So I find myself head to head with an 11 year old who doesn't have the common sense to step aside. It's one of those kind of stupid things that I actually felt proud of one day. I was with my kid and my friend's kids on a narrow paved path through a wooded park - a very popular walking trail. My son and I fell in line whenever another party approached. But every damn time I had to tell the other 2 kids to move over. When I didn't, they just didn't budge. Took up the whole path as though they had no idea people were walking right towards them head on. |
This is not unusual. It's called linguistic convergence. "A new study in the March 2022 issue of the journal Language, authored by Lacey Wade (University of Pennsylvania) shows that even our expectations about how other people might speak (rather than the speech itself) is enough to shape our own speech patterns." |
It keeps the crumbs in check! No one wants muffin crumbs everywhere. You are the weirdo! |
...findings show that there are even more pressures shaping how we speak at any given time than we may have thought. Nobody has a single, static way of speaking -- we do not speak precisely the same way when giving a presentation to our colleagues as we do when we are chatting on the phone with a childhood friend -- and this new study suggests that yet another pressure may be at play: our expectations about others' speech. Not only do we imitate what we observe from others, but we also actively predict what others will do and shift our own speech to match. This means that our expectations about others, even those that reflect stereotyped associations between accent features and the people who use them, influence not just the way we listen, but also the way we talk. |
We are a big sports family and we watch with the volume muted, so we can talk. DH grew up in a house where the television was on seemingly 24/7, loud volume, and they didn't really communicate, so he did not want that. We have been to sports bars where the playoffs volume is maxed out, so people can't talk to each other, and we leave right away. So, I agree - it doesn't make us angry, we just don't put up with it. |
Actual linguist here- they don’t actually change their whole accent in 18 months, especially if they’re an adult, unless they are consciously doing so because they value that accent more. Additionally, the article you quoted implies that they would change back once they returned to the US and switch back to US English to be more similar to their interlocutors. Short answer- no, this doesn’t happen and is cringeworthy |
Picky eaters who complain about food. I don’t mean real allergies, I mean people who just don’t eat so and so and like to point it out and complain about it. Just eat the food. |