'Gifted'....
 

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[Closed] 'Gifted'... when did that creep into the English language? Or is it me...

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When did using the word 'gifted' suddenly become used so much? Don't think it's an American thing.

That's 'gifted' as in 'gifted to' (given) not 'gifted' as in child, which in my mind as a cynical secondary teacher can often mean an awkward child with an as yet undiagnosed condition on a spectrum.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:28 pm
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I normally hate the whole 'verbing nouns' thing, but it seems [url= http://grammarist.com/usage/gift/ ]gifting[/url] has a long and legitimate history.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:32 pm
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One advert recently exhorted me to "shop our deluxe gifting range."

Reader, I killed them. All of them.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:36 pm
 Esme
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And "hosting" - that's another one.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:40 pm
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[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:41 pm
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Wwaswas wins the interwebz!

Outstanding.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:43 pm
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[quote=Esme ]And "hosting" - that's another one.

Hosting as in hosting a website, in an Alien sense or is there some other funny context I've not come across?

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:48 pm
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is there some other funny context I've not come across?

Yes a dinner party. Obviously you were NFI.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:53 pm
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The one that's currently bugging me is use the of 'lighted' instead of 'lit'.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 7:54 pm
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How about " for free".??? That winds me up something rotten.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 9:51 pm
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"In cinemas Wednesday"

I will kill again.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 9:53 pm
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OMFG - language is evolving and we can't control it to keep it just how we liked it 9 years ago. Forsooth!

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 9:54 pm
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The one that's currently bugging me is use the of 'lighted' instead of 'lit'.

[url= http://grammarist.com/usage/lighted-lit/ ]Why?[/url] and I'm not 100% on gifted/gifting either.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 9:56 pm
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"In cinemas Wednesday"

I will kill again.

Chill bae

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 10:32 pm
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UA woman on the radio this evening talked about having spent "a bunch of time" with somebody. At least, I think that's what she said, she may have said "a bunch of thyme". She was American so she could have been referring to 'urbs.

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 10:37 pm
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What currently boils my piss is everyone feeling "blessed". Nothing grammatically wrong with it (as far as my English gsce leads me believe), but blessed by whom? I'm pretty sure that most people I see posting don't believe in a higher power, so who is doing all of this blessing? Did the pope pop round in his pointy had and oblige? If you feel 'fortunate' or 'lucky' or 'loved' just say that, why the religious lingo creep? What next, do you feel "atoned" because someone accepted your apology??

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 10:41 pm
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Aw bless...

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 10:51 pm
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Aw bless...

touche

 
Posted : 12/01/2016 11:20 pm
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bensales - Member
The one that's currently bugging me is use the of 'lighted' instead of 'lit'.

captainsasquatch - Member
Why?

To me it just doesn't flow as well. I think it's because the material I grew up as a kid reading always used lit (Blyton, Ransome, etc), but more modern stuff, particularly American authors as that link says, uses lighted.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 7:13 am
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Often appearing on this forum is "gotten" instead of got and "smart" instead of clever. I don't know why people feel the need to adopt annoying Americanisms.

OTOH, I suppose most of the language spoken in the USA came from England....

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 8:48 am
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OTOH, I suppose most of the language spoken in the USA came from England....

and sometimes the Americanisms that grate are actually the older form of the language and it's the British English that has changed

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 8:53 am
 gray
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My pet hate is "learnings". People who I otherwise like and respect come out with crap like "so what learnings should we take away from this?". I haven't checked, and frankly don't care whether this is actually correct. Just, COME ON. Stop trying to sound businessy. We have plenty of ways to say this without sounding like an idiot.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 9:39 am
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[img] http://assets.amuniversal.com/6077da402b5e01300649001dd8b71c47 [/img]
Bill Watterson January 1993

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 9:47 am
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"Around" instead of "about" eg. "we've been working on some ideas around X".

Dunno why it irritates me so much, except the first time I heard it was on a piss-boilingly fatuous "leadership training" course that a previous employer sent me on, and all the loathing got distilled into that phrase...

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 9:53 am
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across the BBC

What exactly was wrong with "on"?

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 10:12 am
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To me it just doesn't flow as well. I think it's because the material I grew up as a kid reading always used lit (Blyton, Ransome, etc)

Exactly, shocking that people no longer talk like Enid Blyton characters.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 10:19 am
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CaptainFlashheart - Member
across the BBC
What exactly was wrong with "on"?

Because it doesn't universalize (with a z) the all-encompassing entity?

Everyone feeling blessed on Facebook can do one.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 10:20 am
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"The electric" instead of "electricity" as the noun.

Is this correct usage, or informal? Never heard the phrase til I moved here, and it really grates for some reason.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 10:20 am
 goon
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CaptainFlashheart - Member
across the BBC
What exactly was wrong with "on"?

Thank Christ it's not just me. Keeping or staying across story can FRO too.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 10:26 am
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"In cinemas Wednesday"

Especially when it is followed up with "January thirteen" instead of thirteen[u]th[/u].

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 10:39 am
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CaptainFlashheart - Member

across the BBC

What exactly was wrong with "on"?

I was told this had become their generic term for content rather than listing all of the ways in which it can be seen/heard e.g. Digital TV/Online/Sky/Virgin/Apps etc.

Still don't see why 'on' wasn't sufficient mind.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 10:44 am
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It's very Siobhan Sharpe isn't it.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 11:58 am
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My current piss-boiler is "inbox." As in "inbox me that report." WTAF is wrong with "email"?

Exactly, shocking that people no longer talk like Enid Blyton characters.

That might change soon, I've just heard they're doing a film adaptation of The Magic Faraway Tree.

Especially when it is followed up with "January thirteen" instead of thirteenth.

You need a 'the' in there also.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 12:15 pm
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My current piss-boiler is "inbox." As in "inbox me that report." WTAF is wrong with "email"?

I reckon the "inbox me" might have started on Facebook? Pre-messenger, when threads/posts were being discussed in public, or in for sale posts, once two people want to make the conversation private, one would ask the other to send them a message to their Facebook inbox, which I presume then got shortened to "inbox me" and this has now crept to normal e-mail. At least that was where I first noticed the term. I think I may have used the term on Facebook myself. I try not to get too bothered about language evolving like this though - you might as well try and stop the tide. The useful stuff remains and the crap stuff gets discarded. Verbalisation of nouns is sometimes a fantastic way of being economic with words. Some of it works, some of it is a bit clunky.

CaptainFlashheart - Member
across the BBC
What exactly was wrong with "on"?

Presumably "on" was more suited to when the BBC had one channel and people spoke just like you'd still like them to? 😛

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 12:45 pm
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I still hate "edit" when referring to a video.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 12:56 pm
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When I come to power, DD.......

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 12:58 pm
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I rather like "off of". It informs me of the cretins I should ignore.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 1:07 pm
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At work the management have started "reaching out" to us instead of contacting us as they used to do. As in " Your line manager will reach out to you to discuss these changes with you". I can't tell the difference but I'm sure it feels better for them. We are a UK company not American.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 3:24 pm
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I ain't got time for all this shit, I'm off to shop a sale.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 3:29 pm
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So something that irritates me is people starting a statement with "so".

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 3:53 pm
 TomB
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Meet [s]with[/s]
Swap [s]out[/s]

STOP ADDING EXTRA WORDS FOR NO GOOD REASON! (Please.....)

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 4:16 pm
 Nico
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I've mentioned the misuse of epicentre to mean centre (only better), but the other day I saw it used when talking about an earthquake and they said the epicentre was five km beneath the surface. You can have that one free.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 4:22 pm
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Cougar - Moderator
My current piss-boiler is "inbox." As in "inbox me that report."
Bullshit ! That phrase doesn't even exist. Unless you mean "inbox myself that report" in which case, fine. Boil away

I hate "refute" when they just mean "deny" but it seems some dick at the OED thinks that's just awesomization and enrichment of language rather than shite 🙁

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 4:25 pm
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'flick me an email' ??

how do you do that ?... 😈

you 'flick' a bogey when you pick your nose......

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 4:43 pm
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"two times fewer", half then.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:04 pm
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In some people's minds 'lift & shift' is the new copy & paste :/

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:10 pm
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"two times fewer", half then.

Doesn't that need context? I'd have mortified if they had said two times less though.
I think I mistook someone on here as being American because they used gotten, I don't think they were too pleased. I don't mind these changes too much as long as the perp doesn't try and defend the mistake as being correct.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:15 pm
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"two times fewer", half then.

Try telling people that your workload this year is around 100% as much as last year - you may get a payrise

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:18 pm
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'Gotten' is irritating (outside of the US where it's the norm), but not as much as 'draw.' You know, like the thing you'd keep cutlery in.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:18 pm
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Actually o think I subconsciously made it palatable.

Two times less.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:29 pm
 Nico
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"Draw" is just a spelling error, because a lot of people don't pronounce the two syllables distinctly. "Gotten" is archaic in English English, but there are times when it feels like it is still needed. Then again many people likely learn their English off of the telly these days (for free) so end up speaking like Buffy.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:32 pm
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Ill gotten gains

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:35 pm
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Rob Hilton - Member
Ill gotten gains
You'll get more than just gains, laddie, if that's the standard of your grammar

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 5:39 pm
 kcal
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"The electric" instead of "electricity" as the noun.

colloquially often know as 'lecky' / 'leccy' though..

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 6:23 pm
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I've sent you all an invite to the party I'm curating.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 6:37 pm
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I've sent you all an invite to the party I'm curating.

Will we be able to get any decent ales?

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 6:39 pm
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but not as much as 'draw.' You know, like the thing you'd keep cutlery in.

I keep ma junk in ma draws, damn cougars be crazy...

And yes, bloody annoying it is. I tend not to get worked up about grammar but 'draw' is a word that gets to me, always lets a good workshop /shed thread down.

See also 'edit'. Just because you don't use tape it doesn't cease to be a video.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 6:47 pm
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"Draw" is just a spelling error, because a lot of people don't pronounce the two syllables distinctly.

Dude, I'm Northern, I don't pronounce any two syllables distinctly. I have one the most [s]intelligible[/s] efficient dialects known to man. Doesn't make me bloody illiterate.

I keep ma junk in ma draws, damn cougars be crazy...

The contents of your underpants is really not my concern.

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 7:22 pm
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See also 'edit'. Just because you don't use tape it doesn't cease to be a video.

See, I assumed "edit" to be "an edited video" as opposed to "a raw video that'll bore the devil's dumplings off everyone."

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 7:24 pm
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I suppose next time somebody asks yourself to inbox themselves a report you could say "yeah, I'll drop you(rself) an/a sick edit tomorrow"

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 7:38 pm
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I hate the phrase he is good people. It's one ****in person ggrrr...

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 8:05 pm
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Cougar - Moderator
Dude, I'm Northern, I don't pronounce anything correctly. I have one of the most unintelligible dialects known to man.

FTFY (smiley no workee in edit mode!)

 
Posted : 13/01/2016 11:30 pm
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See also 'edit'. Just because you don't use tape it doesn't cease to be a video.

See, I assumed "edit" to be "an edited video" as opposed to "a raw video that'll bore the devil's dumplings off everyone."

There was a Dan Atherton one on here referred to as an "edit" that was literally 15 minutes of continuous headcam footage. Ruined it for me.

 
Posted : 14/01/2016 2:40 am
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I still hate "edit" when referring to a video.

See, I assumed "edit" to be "an edited video" as opposed to "a raw video that'll bore the devil's dumplings off everyone."

at some point when I'm finished correcting the internet I'll make a short film of me making an awesome edit. It will be sick man. Totally RAD.
WORD.

 
Posted : 14/01/2016 3:04 am
 rone
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"In cinemas Wednesday"

Yes, films are released on a Friday.

 
Posted : 14/01/2016 4:29 am
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"This years colourway"

 
Posted : 14/01/2016 6:13 am

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