Anonymous wrote:Some platforms flag “died” posts. So people use alternative words. Jeff flags some words like this here, it is fairly normal….but please don’t block “died,” Jeff!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Chicago and this is something only black people say. Along with "I appreciate you" instead of thank you, and "have a blessed day." I have never heard a white person say that someone "passed". The euphemism they might use is "lost" as in "I lost my brother to cancer last year."
I'm white. All my life, my relatives and friends have said "passed away". Maybe it's a British thing.
The expression I don't like is "sorry for your loss", as if the speaker can't remember my relative's name. It sounds like a comment about financial statements rather than about grief.
Anonymous wrote:It's a reflection of the impact of social media filters on real world language. "Unalived" is probably the most notorious, and it's reflective of how TikTok and Instagram control how we communicate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? Because language evolves.
I have a job where references to death come up a lot, and a lot of the younger people say "passed."
Very curious what your job is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some platforms flag “died” posts. So people use alternative words. Jeff flags some words like this here, it is fairly normal….but please don’t block “died,” Jeff!
But people say it IRL! More often than the actual word, it seems. I fear that "died' is going to become old fashioned or, I dunno, crude, and "passed" is going to become the norm.
OP asked why people are making this change. The answer is social media filters. That flows into other areas and common practices as well. Read Foucault.
Anonymous wrote:Why? Because language evolves.
I have a job where references to death come up a lot, and a lot of the younger people say "passed."
Anonymous wrote:I'm 80, and it seems to me like this has come about in the last 30 years or so.
I lost my husband recently.
I still say "died." It's kind of amusing to see peoples' shocked reaction. Sometimes I choose to modify it to "passed away" if I think the d-word would be perceived as harsh, but you'll never hear me saying just "passed."
Remember "The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency"? In that setting, the deceased were "late," as in "My husband is late." Definitely not meaning "He'll be here eventually."