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Hare's breath

(110 Posts)
Elrel Sun 24-Sept-17 23:20:16

Nooo, 10 o'clock news. Did anyone else hear 'hare's breath' instead of 'hair's breadth'? The newsreader was describing the incident with the coach narrowly avoiding disaster in the Austrian Alps.

Wheniwasyourage Mon 25-Sept-17 18:02:40

One of my pet hates (in addition to many of those already mentioned by fellow pedants) is 'she went through it with a fine toothcomb'. No she didn't!!! She went through it with a fine-toothed comb! [grumpy-old-woman emoticon]

Rissybee Mon 25-Sept-17 17:48:01

'Very unique' 'fairly unique' or 'quite unique' always really irritates me. A thing is either unique or it isn't because unique is a Latin word meaning literally 'one only'. I also feel a desperate need to correct people when they write the word 'of' instead of 'have' eg should of instead of should have.

mrswoo Mon 25-Sept-17 17:45:45

Aepgirl: "marled" instead of mild is my bugbear too.

Just don't get me started on the BBC weather woman who says Inglind, Irelind and Scotlind. Aaaagh

Blinko Mon 25-Sept-17 17:10:52

How about 'Northern Island' for 'Northern Ireland' and 'Loranorder' for Law and order.... Grr!

MTDancer Mon 25-Sept-17 16:08:20

what about "find your happy"? what is that about?

Beau Mon 25-Sept-17 16:03:56

I dislike all those mentioned, especially 'can I get a coffee?'
and this 'so' nonsense at the beginning of every answer and 'the thing is, is...'
It was lucky I took early retirement last year because 'l'm reaching out to you' started being used by our bank in the UK - it drove me mad enough when it was just American work colleagues saying it ?

MTDancer Mon 25-Sept-17 15:52:10

I agree with Shortlegs too.
We went to "A house in the sun" exhibition at the weekend and the compere asked us to make sure our email addresses were eligible! He's a journalist so I would have thought that learning what legible meant would have been one of the first things he learnt.

grandtanteJE65 Mon 25-Sept-17 15:41:53

Dear Esspee, no it is both correct and more polite to say May I have rather than can I have.

If you say may I, you are asking permission, if you say can I do something, you are strictly speaking asking whether you are capable of doing it.

As Professor Dumbledore said to Harry Potter in the first book (and film) where Harry asks "Can I ask you a question, sir?" "Obviously, you have just done so; you may ask me a question"

All through my childhood, my father made similar remarks to any child unwise enough to use can instead of may.

"Can I get down from the table?" was invariably answered with "I imagine you are physically capable of doing so, but if you are requesting my permission, you mean "May I please leave the table?"

Anyone else out there remember such remarks?

Baggs Mon 25-Sept-17 15:11:47

Try speaking publicly, being recorded and broadcast live. Bet you'd make mistakes too.

BRedhead59 Mon 25-Sept-17 15:03:25

Youngsters and some not so young say "can I get" these days
We are being, like, Americanised!

Christinefrance Mon 25-Sept-17 15:01:54

I dislike going forward too also - forward planning, looking back in retrospect and very unique.

brenh34 Mon 25-Sept-17 14:49:01

Totally agree with others about starting sentences with 'so', but my current exasperating phrase is 'going forward'.

stu4847 Mon 25-Sept-17 14:42:57

My pet hate - the plural of you is NOT "yous"!!!!
Has me spitting "fur and feathers"

rockgran Mon 25-Sept-17 14:20:53

I just want to smack everybody all the time - but it is frowned upon. hmm (Sigh!)

BBbevan Mon 25-Sept-17 14:08:50

My Mum was very pedantic. She always said 'I think not' rather than ' I don't think ' eg I don't think I like that. She would say ' I think I do not like it'

gagsy Mon 25-Sept-17 14:03:41

They was/ were sat/stood - awful and the overuse of "absolutely"

Bamm Mon 25-Sept-17 14:01:59

What about 'hung' for people instead of 'hanged' !

Jezebel Mon 25-Sept-17 13:29:24

My teacher inthe 1960s used to say when we asked 'can we' you can, but you may not .

PamelaJ1 Mon 25-Sept-17 13:09:52

My nieces boyfriend always started his sentences with So. When I mentioned it to her she explained that he had been advised by his speech therapist to use it to give him more thinking time and relax him before speaking. He had a bad stammer.
Maybe there are a lot of stammerers around?

gillyknits Mon 25-Sept-17 12:45:20

How about he use of the words ‘hence why’. It should be one or the other,but not both.
I agree with most of the sentiments on this thread and feel that it is getting worse. .

emmasnan Mon 25-Sept-17 12:31:40

The use of 'uz' instead of 'us' really annoys me.

Solitaire Mon 25-Sept-17 12:30:23

mags1234 did you mean 'burgalry' ?I think predictive text corrected it! ??

Elrel Mon 25-Sept-17 12:06:00

I'll find it hard to accept 'kneeled' and had a knee jerk reaction to hearing it on radio recently.

mags1234 Mon 25-Sept-17 11:55:50

David Jason, in tv As Jack Frost always mispronounced " burglary" . He called it " burglary"

polly123 Mon 25-Sept-17 11:54:04

How about 'would of' instead of would have, beginning answers with 'so' and 'fewer' replaced by 'less!