Anonymous wrote:I work in health care so I have a lot.
using 'vile' instead of 'bile'... "I choked back my vile"
prostRate cancer... right, the cancer you get from lying down.
chicken pops (wtf?)
"I fell out"... I still don't know what this means... you were overcome by emotion? You needed attention? You tripped and fell? You don't know why you fell? You were laughing? You lost consciousness?
and so many more...
Anonymous wrote:When people sign emails "best."
Anonymous wrote:Top expression I hate: saying someone "graduated college" or "graduated high school." You graduate FROM a school, you don't graduate the school. Even newspaper writers do this now and their editors don't stop them.
Misuse of "lie/lay" - I loathe hearing a person telling another to "go lay down" - it is "go LIE down."
Cutesey nicknames for body parts: Tushy, tummy, hoo-hoo, vajayjay, "the girls"
"No problem" instead of "you're welcome"
"Check ya later!"
"Out of pocket"
LOL, <3 <3 (hearts) and "u" in e-communications
Hashtags anywhere that is not Twitter!
"
Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to read all four thousand pages of this so apologies if someone has already said it, but I find "it is what it is" really annoying.
Anonymous wrote:"Nice to see you," instead of "nice to meet you," when I meet a complete stranger.
Ma'am (so insulting and backwards)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"impact" as a verb
People saying "I'm not sure" when what they really mean is, "I don't know." "I'm not sure" means that you have some idea but don't know which of the possibilities is accurate; "I don't know" means, well, you do not know.
People misuse "I'm not sure" all the time. Makes me nuts.
I'm not sure what you mean.
"I'm not sure" means that you think you know the answer, but are unsure of it. You know what the possibilities are, but are not sure which of them is correct.
"I don't know" means you don't know the answer, period.
If someone asks you where John Doe lives and you haven't the faintest idea whether it is Kansas or Mumbai, you should say "I don't know" - not "I'm not sure." Because the latter means you might know the answer, you are just unsure of it.
Reread my response - in bold.
just a little play on words . . . to add some humor
Obviously, it wasn't a successful attempt on my part.
No, it was. I'm not sure if that person knows what humor is.
You are not sure?
I don't know if I'm not sure.
Well, I'm sure I don't know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"impact" as a verb
People saying "I'm not sure" when what they really mean is, "I don't know." "I'm not sure" means that you have some idea but don't know which of the possibilities is accurate; "I don't know" means, well, you do not know.
People misuse "I'm not sure" all the time. Makes me nuts.
I'm not sure what you mean.
"I'm not sure" means that you think you know the answer, but are unsure of it. You know what the possibilities are, but are not sure which of them is correct.
"I don't know" means you don't know the answer, period.
If someone asks you where John Doe lives and you haven't the faintest idea whether it is Kansas or Mumbai, you should say "I don't know" - not "I'm not sure." Because the latter means you might know the answer, you are just unsure of it.
Reread my response - in bold.
just a little play on words . . . to add some humor
Obviously, it wasn't a successful attempt on my part.
No, it was. I'm not sure if that person knows what humor is.
You are not sure?
I don't know if I'm not sure.