Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend that uses the word Transitioned. I like that.
I know someone who says graduated. They post every year that their love one graduated on that day. To be honest it is a little confusing.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend that uses the word Transitioned. I like that.
Anonymous wrote:DC native here: passed away
My Pittsburgh in-laws all says: passed
But then when a little one in my family died, I started saying: died.
It feels blunt and straight, but that’s what death is, right? Can’t sugar coat it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's such a confusing use. I hear that someone passed, and I'm like "... a kidney stone? an intersection?"
When I was a kid, the country folk used to say "passed away," but it was very definitely a hick thing. And now "passed" all by itself.
Why have so many well-read and otherwise well-spoken people taken up this sloppy speech? What's the objection to "died"?
Political correctness demands we diminish language to the lowest common denominator.
Anonymous wrote:It's such a confusing use. I hear that someone passed, and I'm like "... a kidney stone? an intersection?"
When I was a kid, the country folk used to say "passed away," but it was very definitely a hick thing. And now "passed" all by itself.
Why have so many well-read and otherwise well-spoken people taken up this sloppy speech? What's the objection to "died"?
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend that uses the word Transitioned. I like that.
Anonymous wrote:I'm getting Monty Python Dead Parrot vibes.
Stunned, deceased, passed on, no more, ceased to be, expired, late parrot...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in DC and “passed” was very common. Maybe it’s regional?
Agree this is part of it. My (wealthy, well-educated) southern relatives say passed.
We in the New York branch say died.
Huh, my experience is different. My mom's wealthy, snobby deep-south family insists on "died." My dad's midwestern farmer folks said "passed away" when they were trying to be polite, but "died" for daily use. Or in the case of that one simpering aunt who collected Precious Moments figurines, "gone to Jesus."
(No one says "passed")
Anonymous wrote:I will take croaked or unalived any day over passed (gas).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's such a confusing use. I hear that someone passed, and I'm like "... a kidney stone? an intersection?"
When I was a kid, the country folk used to say "passed away," but it was very definitely a hick thing. And now "passed" all by itself.
Why have so many well-read and otherwise well-spoken people taken up this sloppy speech? What's the objection to "died"?
I heard passed away for people we knew and died for people in the newspaper. I grew up in a highly educated Boston suburb in the 1970’s and 1980’s.