Favorite Malapropism

42
i guess it all depends on how you interpretate what he said.

i had a fill-in psychology teacher in highschool for a few months who thought that the active form of the noun "interpretation" was "to interpretate".
LVP wrote:If, say, 10% of lions tried to kill gazelles, compared with 10% of savannah animals in general, I think that gazelle would be a lousy racist jerk.

Favorite Malapropism

44
Surfrider wrote:I was surprised to learn that saying (example) "this is nonsense" is actually wrong. It's supposed to be "this is a nonsense".

But i think i may have only heard the correct usage once or maybe twice at a push. So where does this lie in terms of clever dicks getting it wrong, in relation to how annoying the correct usage is / how annoying people's use of incorrect usage is in general?

Okay so that sentence is really poor but i'm not particularly clever.

Sorry.


Presumably "this [situation] is a nonsense" is different from "this [argument] is nonsense"?

Maybe not.

I get annoyed when people confuse imply with infer, but I'm sure I make stupid mistakes a lot of the time.
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Favorite Malapropism

45
One I never thought about before studying GRE vocabulary lists: enormity (wickedness) vs. enormousness (really, really big). I can't recall using either word, but I would have automatically thought "really, really big" if I had heard "enormity".

"The enormity of Bono's ideas to stop global hunger" actually works either way.

Favorite Malapropism

46
LAD wrote:I must admit that the appearance of 'orientate' in dictionaries angers me. The verb is orient!


Along with "irregardless", this one completely infuriates me. It just hinges on the stupid idea that adding unnecessary and incorrect extra syllables to a word makes the speaker sound intelligent. I read (probably in William Poundstone's Big Secrets), that Debbie Fields decided to start her own business (Mrs. Fields cookies) after she used the non-word "orientated" in front of one of her husband's business associates, who then dropped a dictionary in her lap and said something along the lines of: "The word is oriented. Learn to use the English language."

In a just world, her business would have tanked.
matthew wrote:His Life and his Death gives us LIFE.......supernatural life- which is His own life because he is God and Man. This is all straight Catholicism....no nuttiness or mystical crap here.

Favorite Malapropism

47
matt, one tip i have for cleaner speech/writing is to avoid '-ized' in general, as it is rarely necessary. you can just say 'it was becoming more bureaucratic.' or say 'even more' if you want to intensificatize the becoming.


During a classroom discussion in college, a student used the 'word' tributize. He meant tribute. Later in the discussion, he used the 'word'

tributization(!)

He meant tribute.

But I'm not that bothered by funny usage. The English language is a living, changing thing, blah blah blah.

Like: flammable is a real word now. It used to be inflammable, but people saw that and thought, hey, this stuff is fireproof!

T'aint no time for armchair etymology when yer town's burnin' down.
Last edited by Superking_Archive on Fri Jan 14, 2005 9:56 am, edited 1 time in total.
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