Anonymous wrote:OP here. If it goes into your mouth, use it-food or not. Otherwise, prepare to be made fun of and ridiculed.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, Oxford dictionary defines "delicious" as something delightful, and Cambridge as "used as describing a situation or activity which gives great pleasure".
Looks like the roots are in indulgence and pleasure, not necessarily particular to taste.
So, nope, I'll use delicious when the situation deems it. Like enjoying my delicious latte on this delicious day.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. If it goes into your mouth, use it-food or not. Otherwise, prepare to be made fun of and ridiculed.
Anonymous wrote:I came to this thread hoping someone would post a beefcake photo of a delicious man (like Taye Diggs.) Now I'm sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I completely agree with you. A mom at our former preschool used to describe everything the kiddies did as "delicious." She sounded about 18 years old.
this coming from someone wh just used "kiddies"
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, Oxford dictionary defines "delicious" as something delightful, and Cambridge as "used as describing a situation or activity which gives great pleasure".
Looks like the roots are in indulgence and pleasure, not necessarily particular to taste.
So, nope, I'll use delicious when the situation deems it. Like enjoying my delicious latte on this delicious day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Delicious" is for food. Let's all agree to use it only to describe actual food.
You don't have a "delicious secret."
Your day on the couch watching TV wasn't "amazingly delicious."
Your new baby isn't "delicious."
Your new designer dress isn't "so deliciously soft."
It makes me vomit. Thank you and have a nice day (not a delicious day).
Ditto for "yummy."

Anonymous wrote:"Delicious" is for food. Let's all agree to use it only to describe actual food.
You don't have a "delicious secret."
Your day on the couch watching TV wasn't "amazingly delicious."
Your new baby isn't "delicious."
Your new designer dress isn't "so deliciously soft."
It makes me vomit. Thank you and have a nice day (not a delicious day).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. If it goes into your mouth, use it-food or not. Otherwise, prepare to be made fun of and ridiculed.
Prepare to be ignored or reported.
Really? You aren't doing so well at ignoring her, so let's hope you aren't tattling over what should be a fun thread. Why do people take these so seriously. You don't HAVE to do what OP says. She's just telling her pet peeve. It's more fun when these threads pile on than when people start rebuking OPs for ranting. We all like to rant.
OP, on a similar vein, I did not like it when English people called a food "nice". Food can't be "nice". But oh well, that's language I guess!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. If it goes into your mouth, use it-food or not. Otherwise, prepare to be made fun of and ridiculed.
Prepare to be ignored or reported.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a nanny and find baby toes and belly buttons delicious on a regular basis. Use the right word for the right situation. Now ridiculous is one that I'd like to see tempered a bit. It's becoming way overused and not always in proper context.