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Pedants' corner

Literally

(55 Posts)
mrsmopp Wed 18-Jun-14 14:04:29

Colleague comes back from lunch, sopping wet.
"It's literally raining cats and dogs out there", she says. The pedant in me wants to yell, "No, it's Not!!"
But this kind of thing is happening a lot, isn't it?
"I was literally over the moon!"
"I was literally killing myself laughing."
Oh it does annoy me.

rosesarered Wed 18-Jun-14 14:09:53

Today, I'm literally dead on my feet!

annodomini Wed 18-Jun-14 14:10:27

Yes, mrsmopp, it literally gets up my nose too. grin

Mishap Wed 18-Jun-14 14:11:12

Annoys me too mrsmopp.

Hope your cough etc will resolve soon rose.

rosesarered Wed 18-Jun-14 14:26:31

Thanks Mishap seeing GP tomorrow, hoping for anti-biotics to clear it up.
If he won't prescribe them I may literally blow my top. [sorry!]

GillT57 Wed 18-Jun-14 21:47:08

I hate the use of the word literally, when it is not used literally! As in oh my gosh, i literally died......erm no.....also hate so I turned around to him and said.....I have this vision of people spinning about talking to each other, like ( another word used out of context and too much)

papaoscar Wed 18-Jun-14 22:00:10

Unique - a bit, almost, nearly, somewhat, etc. Wrong. Something can only be unique, nothing else.

GillT57 Wed 18-Jun-14 22:03:50

Unique as in estate agent's descriptions papa, do they really mean this unique house when it is one of 1000 on a housing development?

Ana Wed 18-Jun-14 22:07:40

The use of 'invariably' when the person saying it actually means 'usually'...hmm

rockgran Thu 19-Jun-14 09:34:25

Papa - I agree that you can't qualify "unique" but I don't agree that "nearly" or "almost" unique is wrong - I believe you can "approach" uniqueness. If you substitute the phrase "one of a kind" it makes sense. However, a better word would be "distinctive". My pet hate is "less" when it should be "fewer". Oh dear, you've got me started now!

Greenfinch Thu 19-Jun-14 10:06:00

I suppose "quite" (meaning absolutely )unique is tautology but it sounds good and gives emphasis.

sparkygran Thu 19-Jun-14 10:11:41

What `literally` drives me up the pole is the overuse of the word "absolutely" and often "abso-flippin-lutely" Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

Gagagran Thu 19-Jun-14 10:24:55

There is a commentator on Eurosport cycling who uses the word "obviously" obsessively. He also says "at this moment in time" instead of now. I find myself counting the times he says it and "obviously" this detracts from the information he is trying to impart!

grannyinmypocket Sat 21-Jun-14 12:30:19

"Stunning" , really irritates me , every thing these days is "stunning" , not just nice or beautiful ,

papaoscar Sun 22-Jun-14 11:04:44

'No way' and 'No problem' - I would consign the pair of them to the dustbin. Their constant and often irrelevant use grates, just like the now universal 'Have a nice day' and 'Guy/s'. Bah, humbug I say!

thatbags Sun 22-Jun-14 11:08:47

Bah humbug is uniquely annoying to some pedants wink

Lona Sun 22-Jun-14 12:22:41

bags grin

It's all too easy to turn into a grumpy old person so I'm going with the flow and letting it all go over my head!

annodomini Sun 22-Jun-14 13:20:22

We seem to be mostly on the same page.

feetlebaum Sun 22-Jun-14 14:17:44

Figuratively speaking...

papaoscar Sun 22-Jun-14 14:18:46

As far as I'm concerned pedants should be ......and then ......ending up with a good......!

Paula8 Sun 22-Jun-14 14:19:04

mrsmopp Have you been watching --Mr Sloane on TV--Your comments remind me of his charactersmile

Its funny because people get annoyed when other people try to correct their English, but I think it is the way you correct someone that matters.

My Mum would always correct me when I said I was washing my teeth--of course that is in correct but she used to say it with such snobbery that I had no desire to be more like her or speak more as she did.

Mr Slaone from the TV series, he corrects people but its ok because he does not do it with a negative attitude.

I am fine with people correcting me if I have said something wrong, unless they are really just trying to give you a complex or es look make themselves feel somehow superior.

Paula8 Sun 22-Jun-14 14:22:23

PS I actually think its a cute thing to feel you have to correct peoples English and count yourself VERY lucky if you have the time or patience to worry about such things--and I am not being carcastic I am being totaly honest.smile

mrsmopp Sun 22-Jun-14 17:51:09

No, never heard of Mr Sloane, sorry.
I would not object to anyone saying it's raining cats and dogs as I know it's a figure of speech. The unnecessary use of 'literally' makes the sentence absurd, and it's becoming over used, as other GNs have pointed out with other examples. I did not correct my colleague, as I think it's bad manners.

thatbags Sun 22-Jun-14 18:13:10

I think that "literally" as used in the OP example does not mean literally anymore. Literally no-one thinks it does wink

Here's one to ponder: is one "privileged" if one sees an owl in a tree, or just lucky and pleased?

Nonu Sun 22-Jun-14 18:17:18

"Paula"
grin