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Use of Words and Expressions
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I also hear people use "below" as an adjective rather than an adverb like in "The below listing..." "What I mean", and "I'm like", have replaced "you know" and "to be honest". |
Annoying Repetitions
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It's worse to me than the "um"! |
Well, alrighty then......
Like, um, ya know, I think this thread is sorta, kinda fun. (Btw, I know I bastardize the hellouta punctuation around here -- works for me. ) Now, I must join this catharsis with a little segue into speech patterns that make me crazy...... There have been a lot of annoying speech affectations since ValleySpeak was all over the place in the 80s. A few years ago, there was one that caught my attention way too often -- until I figured it had to make other people crazy, too, so I did a search and found out it even had a name -- "Vocal Fry." If you have 4 spare minutes, I invite you to open the link below to see what I mean about annoying speech patterns. "The Three Little Pigs" is told to us with labeling on the screen of the 15 different speech affectations that are just plain annoying. I hear these all the time from people getting paid to talk on television and in other media..... (I am a big fan of "Freakonomics" podcasts -- of which there are several versions -- the latest of which is titled "Off Leash" and the interviews are all about dogs. But, the other day, I had to bail out of one (I think it was "Freakonomics M.D.) because one of the people interviewed kept talking in that stupid-sounding, sing-song routine. I think this video calls that one "Laundry List.") I wish people who think this kind of speaking is cute -- or whateverthehell their thing is -- would realize it can distract completely from the content of what they are trying to tell us.....or is it just me??? Anyway, here is the link. Listen if you dare because you might not be able to unhear it. Boomer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KwfopSOcb-w |
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Words Can Serve as More Than One Part of Speech.
The same word can function as several parts of speech. I dance a lot. (Dance is a verb.) My daughter was in a dance recital. (Dance is an adjective.) Dance is great art form. (Dance is a noun.) In fact, most words can function that way. It is called "functional shift," and it is common in the English language.
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One of the phrases I hate most is, "know what I mean?"
Met a guy a few days ago that ended virtually every sentence with that tag line, "know what I mean?" Aaagh! |
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