Annoying words and phrases
Marketing bollocks, buzzword bingo, or your mum saying "fudge" when she really wants to swear like a trooper. Let's ride the hockey stick curve of this top hat product, solutioneers.
Thanks to simbosan for the idea
( , Thu 8 Apr 2010, 13:13)
Marketing bollocks, buzzword bingo, or your mum saying "fudge" when she really wants to swear like a trooper. Let's ride the hockey stick curve of this top hat product, solutioneers.
Thanks to simbosan for the idea
( , Thu 8 Apr 2010, 13:13)
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Ah Ha - Finally somewhere I can complain about this...
...and this being:
American's who say "I could care less"
Do they not realise that they are effectiively saying 'Actually, I do have a certain strength of feeling regarding this subject. And that whilst trying to imply that this means nothing to me I've subtly used a term that, to the thoughtless and ignorant, means I don't give a damn, I've actually suggested that this is a thing that matters to me personally.'
Really - think about it. Once you have thought about it start using the correct term.
And really - I could careless about this. But I don't - I care about it.
See - thats a correct context. Well done.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:42, 7 replies)
...and this being:
American's who say "I could care less"
Do they not realise that they are effectiively saying 'Actually, I do have a certain strength of feeling regarding this subject. And that whilst trying to imply that this means nothing to me I've subtly used a term that, to the thoughtless and ignorant, means I don't give a damn, I've actually suggested that this is a thing that matters to me personally.'
Really - think about it. Once you have thought about it start using the correct term.
And really - I could careless about this. But I don't - I care about it.
See - thats a correct context. Well done.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:42, 7 replies)
I think it's a shorthand version of...
something like 'I could care less but I can't think how'
At least that's a phrase I have heard used in full, so so it's where I assumed it comes from.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:52, closed)
something like 'I could care less but I can't think how'
At least that's a phrase I have heard used in full, so so it's where I assumed it comes from.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:52, closed)
"I think"
That's the same type of shorthand applied to the title of your response.
This is certainly something that should not leave the mouth of most Americans.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:58, closed)
That's the same type of shorthand applied to the title of your response.
This is certainly something that should not leave the mouth of most Americans.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:58, closed)
ah ha
this could actually be the answer. In fact I should retract my original post* and simply adopt this phrase into my own lexicon, as it appears to be an even more useful term than 'couldn't care less'.
Thank you.
*I'm not going to though, but you get the idea.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 15:15, closed)
this could actually be the answer. In fact I should retract my original post* and simply adopt this phrase into my own lexicon, as it appears to be an even more useful term than 'couldn't care less'.
Thank you.
*I'm not going to though, but you get the idea.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 15:15, closed)
I had always thought the correct term was "I couldn't care less"...
Vagabond's OP goes into detail on this. I'm also getting a little worried it seems that I'm stalking him as he replies before me on almost every post I find interesting!
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:56, closed)
Vagabond's OP goes into detail on this. I'm also getting a little worried it seems that I'm stalking him as he replies before me on almost every post I find interesting!
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:56, closed)
Absolutely, that
is the more common phrase, I was just explaining where I thought 'could care less' came from.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:59, closed)
is the more common phrase, I was just explaining where I thought 'could care less' came from.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 13:59, closed)
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