Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The use of ebonics/butchered improper English.
"She be crazy"
"What you talking bout"
"They is so stupid"
and on and on...
What's wrong with ebonics? It's a dialect. Are you offended by all dialects?

Anonymous wrote:When people say "for all intensive purposes" instead of "for all intents and purposes".
I also know someone who "de-thaws" things from the freezer. Are you refreezing them then? No?
Anonymous wrote:At the end of the day
+++++++1....
It's a tactic to try and persuade the other parties that they should just skip to the bottom line and not consider whethere there is any real basis or support for the speaker's position.
Anonymous wrote:I loathe when people say "reach out" - as in, "I'm going to reach out to so-and-so and ask them for a donation."
Anonymous wrote:Confession: I haven't read the entire thread yet, so maybe this has been mentioned.
"Weather". I hate it when people on news and weather reports say "they're having some weather in Tennessee right now." They've dropped the "bad" from "bad weather", and now they just use "weather" when they want to describe rain, tornadoes, snow, whatever. Anything that deviates from sunny and clear.
Everyone has weather, all the time. If your profession requires you to describe weather, please don't drop essential adjectives.
Anonymous wrote: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...
Hahahaha my SIL says all of these!
She also says zink for sink, yes it's true. Took me awhile to figure out what the hell she was talking about