I should add that the work in question was quite literally concerned with a surface which had been inscribed upon again and agin over time. You know, like a palimpsest!
don't mean to tell you yr work, but i'm pretty sure you were actually looking for 'pimpliest'
http://www.jangalang.com/images/acne-bad.jpg
― Has admitted to being Irish in order to have sex (darraghmac), Friday, 23 July 2010 01:17 (fifteen years ago)
Adam, you have a special dispensation. It's all copacetic, bra!
― Spencer Chow, Saturday, 24 July 2010 17:34 (fifteen years ago)
"Yup."
Mostly just when drawn out: yuuuup.
― Spencer Chow, Saturday, 24 July 2010 17:38 (fifteen years ago)
A guy at work uses the word "excellent" an obscene amount — but never just once, it's always "EXcellent, EXcellent!", with an accent on the first syllable.
― fidel castro clone (corey), Saturday, 24 July 2010 17:40 (fifteen years ago)
Palimpsest is a great word when deployed well, great in meaning, etc. The "sest" part, and the associations with "incest" just give it a weird feeling.
― There's Money To Be Made in Ice Cream (EDB), Saturday, 24 July 2010 22:04 (fifteen years ago)
The recent trend of overusing "extrapolate".
― PappaWheelie V, Sunday, 25 July 2010 21:23 (fifteen years ago)
I really hate the word "douche."
― Mr. Snrub, Monday, 26 July 2010 01:19 (fifteen years ago)
Yeah, only douches say douche.
― PappaWheelie V, Monday, 26 July 2010 02:30 (fifteen years ago)
My pet hate is "already" used completely wrongly and arbitrarily at the end of sentences."Like, hey, enough with the kitten pictures already..." IT MAKES NO SENSE!
I blame Friends.― Matt DC (Matt DC), Wednesday, September 24, 2003 8:33 AM (6 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
I remember hearing/saying this as far back as the mid-80s. Not as a *thing* but just as the way people talk. I remember b/c my brother thought it was funny to repeat the "already" multiple times. But yeh, saying "Will you get out of my way already!?" or "enough already" seems just normal to me.
― Jesse, Monday, 26 July 2010 18:53 (fifteen years ago)
yeah, i think it's just a way that people talk - though of course people do emulate popular culture - i wonder if the "already" thing is related to how people in some parts of the midwest say "anymore" sorta arbitrarily at the end of sentences?
― sarahel, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:12 (fifteen years ago)
I'm trying to think of an example of "anymore" being used that way.... can you provide one?
― Jesse, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:14 (fifteen years ago)
I don't think I heard that once in the 18 years I lived in the midwest anymore
― jaymc won $5800 on day 1! (HI DERE), Monday, 26 July 2010 19:15 (fifteen years ago)
LOL
― Jesse, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:17 (fifteen years ago)
^^ it is kinda like that in construction! it's kinda a redundant double negative that comes at the end of sentences - i had a friend from Indiana who talked like that. It was not annoying.
― sarahel, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:18 (fifteen years ago)
i must have picked up the "anymore" thing in ohio because it seems so normal to me anymore i can't think of an example oh i just did while typing this lol
― the girl with the butt tattoo (harbl), Monday, 26 July 2010 19:25 (fifteen years ago)
Ohio and Indiana are definitely their own little world in the midwest; no one in the upper midwest does that
― jaymc won $5800 on day 1! (HI DERE), Monday, 26 July 2010 19:26 (fifteen years ago)
xp - yeah, ok harbl's post is a good example - it is sometimes a redundant double negative, but i think, more precisely, it's just used for emphasis - like "it seems to normal to me anymore" - that's along the lines of what I was thinking
― sarahel, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:34 (fifteen years ago)
I work with a guy who keeps saying "what we need to do is whiteboard this."
― quincie, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:43 (fifteen years ago)
I used to say that, then they took away my whiteboard
;_;
― "There's no way a Filipino can hold a championship trophy." (HI DERE), Monday, 26 July 2010 19:45 (fifteen years ago)
is it just because you're black?
― sarahel, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:55 (fifteen years ago)
Oh, I get that use of "anymore." I don't think I use it, but it makes sense to me.
― Jesse, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:56 (fifteen years ago)
xpost to whiteboarder:He is probably trying to incent you with deliverables coming "down the pipe".
Actually, can we bring up the incessant incorrect use and/or construction of clichéd phrases??
― Spencer Chow, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:56 (fifteen years ago)
Or is there a malapropism thread?
― Spencer Chow, Monday, 26 July 2010 19:59 (fifteen years ago)
That is so sad and cute, it makes me giggle.
― Jesse, Monday, 26 July 2010 20:08 (fifteen years ago)
Afterparty - used too much for things that aren't afterparties
― European Bob (admrl), Tuesday, 3 August 2010 03:46 (fifteen years ago)
I have an irrational hatred for the terms "hubby" and "wifey".
― o sh!t a ˁ˚ᴥ˚ˀ (ENBB), Monday, 9 August 2010 22:11 (fifteen years ago)
I use wifey here on the internets but actually I agree it is sort of lame
― Tolaca Luke (admrl), Monday, 9 August 2010 22:12 (fifteen years ago)
I should say MY BELOVED SPOUSE instead
Best Beloved Spouse!
I don't know what it is about them but both those terms just irritate me.
― o sh!t a ˁ˚ᴥ˚ˀ (ENBB), Monday, 9 August 2010 22:33 (fifteen years ago)
They're reductive
― Tolaca Luke (admrl), Monday, 9 August 2010 22:39 (fifteen years ago)
For Spencer: http://flavorpill.com/losangeles/events/2010/7/25/tad-beck-palimpsest?utm_source=losangeles&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=issue_389
― Henry's Hepcat (admrl), Monday, 16 August 2010 19:48 (fifteen years ago)
"preggers" pisses me off
― Darin, Monday, 16 August 2010 22:25 (fifteen years ago)
preggers makes me laugh, because it makes me think of "beggin' strips" - dog food - so if someone says that someone is preggers, i imagine they are saying that person is dog food, which makes no sense, so it's funny
― sarahel, Monday, 16 August 2010 22:26 (fifteen years ago)
every time I hear preggers I picture this guy saying it:
http://www.matadorrecords.com/matablog/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/harvey_head_big.jpg
― Darin, Monday, 16 August 2010 22:32 (fifteen years ago)
preggers of yore
― acoleuthic, Monday, 16 August 2010 22:35 (fifteen years ago)
dave preggers
exculpate grosses me out... sort of suggests onomatopoeia
― Eggs, Peaches, Hot Dogs, Lamb (remy bean), Monday, 16 August 2010 22:36 (fifteen years ago)
preggers, prego etc. all bug me too
― o sh!t a ˁ˚ᴥ˚ˀ (ENBB), Monday, 16 August 2010 22:57 (fifteen years ago)
Prego? Like the spaghetti sauce?
― sarahel, Tuesday, 17 August 2010 00:48 (fifteen years ago)
I don't get annoyed by faddy turns of phrase, but this one really winds me up: People who say "Myself" or "Yourself" when "me" or "you" would do. I used to cringe in my old job where this was used liberally to speak to customers: "Is it okay if I send an email to yourself?". It's what thick people do to sound clever - particularly, in my experience, sales people. Fitting that I'm reminded of this by a new work monitoring application at work where you have to click a button that says "Myself" to log in. Argh!!
My friend says he once saw a note in a book at the hotel where he worked where some twit had written, 'Myself and my wife had a great time'.
People like this should be sentenced to a lifetime in prison on an island full of rapist gorillas with massive boots, where they're forced to sell timeshare over the phone for eternity so they can then say "Myself was abused by a rather large gorilla last night. I don't suppose yourself could send over a lifeboat to help me off".
― village idiot (dog latin), Wednesday, 13 October 2010 16:08 (fifteen years ago)
Surely you meant to say "send over a lifeboat to help myself off". ;-)
― Aimless, Wednesday, 13 October 2010 18:13 (fifteen years ago)
"Allow myself to introduce... myself..."
― Not the real Village People, Wednesday, 13 October 2010 18:14 (fifteen years ago)
meal
― definatelypoopsmcgee (chrisv2010), Wednesday, 13 October 2010 18:18 (fifteen years ago)
folktronica
― secret haven 76 (crüt), Saturday, 30 October 2010 22:01 (fifteen years ago)
clonetrooper
I was talking to a kid and his Mum yesterday and asked what he was dressing up as. She said a stormtrooper...and he corrected her & said, no, a *clonetrooper*. Frakking Lucas and his clownwar bullshit. Grrr.
― That is the stench of tyranny (VegemiteGrrrl), Saturday, 30 October 2010 22:22 (fifteen years ago)
Dressing up as for Halloween, I meant to say
"individuals" a la cop/politician speak. These individuals those individuals. It's a group. Call them people, folks, nappy-headed hos but please not "individuals."
― soviet, Sunday, 31 October 2010 15:13 (fifteen years ago)
People in Dublin stick the expression 'an'(d) anyway' into sentences as meter filler: 'I was up above in the bookies, an' anyway, an' he say to me "put a score on her", so I did, an' anyway'
― sonofstan, Sunday, 31 October 2010 17:23 (fifteen years ago)
that would be 'metre filler' of course: not parking change...