
Or make a lemon merangue(sic).
Or throw it at an elephant at the zoo.
( ,
Mon 11 Apr 2005, 5:34,
archived)
Or throw it at an elephant at the zoo.

I often see it and can never work it out.
It's something to do with "intentional" isn't it?
( ,
Mon 11 Apr 2005, 5:38,
archived)
It's something to do with "intentional" isn't it?

It's from a Latin word.
EDIT: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sic
( ,
Mon 11 Apr 2005, 5:45,
archived)
EDIT: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sic

Am I being a little too inquisitive?
Edit: Right, thanks again.
( ,
Mon 11 Apr 2005, 5:46,
archived)
Edit: Right, thanks again.

The person has spelt it like that for a reason.
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Mon 11 Apr 2005, 5:41,
archived)

"Said in context". But in so many texts, it just didn't work. It did for some though.
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Mon 11 Apr 2005, 5:43,
archived)

used to indicate that the "misspelling" is actually how it is inteded to be spelled. often used in referencing to indicate that the author knows that something is incorrect, and wasn't the one who made the mistake.
edit - I don't think it's limited to spelling mistakes, they are just far more common than grammatical mistakes.
( ,
Mon 11 Apr 2005, 5:41,
archived)
edit - I don't think it's limited to spelling mistakes, they are just far more common than grammatical mistakes.

Thanks.
Ahem... was that ^ a little to predictable?
( ,
Mon 11 Apr 2005, 5:42,
archived)
Ahem... was that ^ a little to predictable?

to indicate that this is what the person actually said/wrote, but the writer knows it's wrong and is using the (sic) to basically say "Fuck off you pedants, I know this is wrong, but the dumbass used it and I have to because it's a quote. So stick your whining letters of correction up your excessively tight sphincters."
( ,
Mon 11 Apr 2005, 6:37,
archived)