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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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At the end of the day!
People who do 'air quotes'.
People who say 'oh really' in a disinterested sarcastic way.
Upswing on words, when the pitch gets higher at the end of a sentence. Only Australians are allowed this.
'When I was a kid' when the person is about 11 years old. (i.e my Daughter)
LOL
Innit, summink and d'nt. Or 'eastenders speak' as I like to call it.
Winking inappropriately at the end of a sentence.
Saying 'OMFG' as if it has been in their lexicon all their life. (its bastards like this who ruin the Oxford English).
Anthea Turner.
When papers like the SUN put WORDS in BLOCK CAPITALS because they think we are to THICK to read these with emphasis ourselves.CUNTS.
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Oh and 'chillax'.
Also, just remembered. We are having a diamond training course at work. Just because you have ticked a few boxes and answered a few questions does not make you a fucking 'specialist'.
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People who cant read a paper without moving their fucking lips.
Good point, well made...
( , Mon 12 Apr 2010, 18:43, 5 replies)
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the only thing that bothers me is that my browser's spell checker settings won't stay on British English.
Sometimes American English gets a rough time when it's not deserved. Some of the differences come from the fact that our English changed while theirs didn't.
( , Mon 12 Apr 2010, 18:49, closed)
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and you are correct. I like the idea of language evolving, but not when it is for a lazy purpose, if that makes sense.
But good point, well made... (which is another phrase I hate :-)
( , Mon 12 Apr 2010, 18:51, closed)
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the English language was simplified so it would be less taxing on all the immigrants arriving on the shores of America.
( , Mon 12 Apr 2010, 19:50, closed)
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Welsh people are allowed to do this as well.
( , Mon 12 Apr 2010, 18:58, closed)
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I'll get back to you. This also opens it up to 'its ok for a person with a Pakistani accent' to do it too...
( , Mon 12 Apr 2010, 19:00, closed)
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It translates "dialog" to "dialogue" (in the context of a pop-up window, which generally takes the American spelling as with most computing words). More bizarre is the translation of "kick" to "expel" in its IRC client.
Changing the dictionary for spell checking is easy enough, at least - right click, Dictionaries, Add/Remove Dictionaries. Why it doesn't use the British English dictionary by default when using the British English version of the browser is a mystery to me.
( , Mon 12 Apr 2010, 19:15, closed)
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Is correct Oxford English. The Americans kept this convention. The British evolved onwards to -ise. Apart from the bastion that is Oxford, it seems.
( , Mon 12 Apr 2010, 21:57, closed)
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