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This is a question 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)
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It's a tragedy...
...when a child is murdered. Or when people die due to famine/earthquake/tsunami etc. Or when someone's life is turned upside down by an incurable illness.

It is NOT a tragedy when one sports team loses to another, however much affection you may have for the losing team. Why can't commentators learn that?

On a related note, why do newspapers insist on describing some robberies as "daring"? There may be some dictionary justification for this one, but to most it suggests that a bunch of thieves depriving someone of their livelihood are somehow heroic.

There! I feel better now.
(, Sun 11 Apr 2010, 18:26, 5 replies)
Technically it's only a tragedy when the child is of royal descent...
According to the original tragedies of classical literature that is ;)
(, Sun 11 Apr 2010, 19:18, closed)
Other untragic occurrences:
* When the feelings gone and you can't go on
* When the morning cries and you don't know why
* When you lose control and you got no soul

Silly Gibbs. Now line up with Alanis in the 'I've written a crappy song which demonstrates my complete inability to read a dictionary' queue.
(, Sun 11 Apr 2010, 20:03, closed)
also
when your bra goes twang and your tits go bang :(
(, Sun 11 Apr 2010, 20:32, closed)
But,..
.. if your bra goes Bang and your tits go twang, that's something else entirely!
(, Mon 12 Apr 2010, 15:20, closed)
Originally a tragedy was
"A drama or literary work in which the main character is brought to ruin or suffers extreme sorrow, especially as a consequence of a tragic flaw, moral weakness, or inability to cope with unfavorable circumstances."

It's only latterly that it's been confused with a generic term for a really bad thing.
(, Mon 12 Apr 2010, 23:05, closed)

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