(no title)
daotoad | 1 month ago
For the love of all that is good, "exacerbated" and "exasperated" are different words.
We've already screwed up "home in on" by allowing the horrid "hone in" to horn in our lexicons. On a side note, watch out for those honing pigeons, they've got very sharp beaks.
ryandrake|1 month ago
tmtvl|1 month ago
mikepurvis|1 month ago
(At least "defiantly" is an actual word, unlike "definately" which doesn't even pass spell check)
SoftTalker|1 month ago
baal80spam|1 month ago
raw_anon_1111|1 month ago
The last time someone used “jive” when not in relation to music was George Jefferson and other Black folks up to the very early 80s (I am Black before the pearl clutching starts)
roadside_picnic|1 month ago
monocularvision|1 month ago
nkrisc|1 month ago
schrectacular|1 month ago
dugidugout|1 month ago
csallen|1 month ago
mnhnthrow34|1 month ago
"Begging the question" is a great example - its intended meaning as a specific fallacy descriptor lose to face-value interpretations that are "wrong" but also extremely fair for somebody to make. All this means is that "begging the question" is a weak name for the fallacy, because if you don't know what it means, a wrong assumption is easily available and contextually often seems to fit.
The language crushing out these expressions is a feature. Better all around to say the argument is circular or it assumes the conclusion. Doing those things may _actually_ "raise questions" as well as "begging the question" which makes things even worse.
It's not the fault of the casual language users that this expression is poorly understood, it's just bad naming in the first place.
mhink|1 month ago
By contrast, the colloquial use feels like an abbreviation of the implicit phrase "it begs for the question to be asked", which makes so much more sense than the "correct" meaning that if I'm being perfectly honest, I'd rather use it.
I like Wikipedia's alternate name for the fallacy: "assuming the conclusion", because it explains what's actually happening.
Terr_|1 month ago
mikepurvis|1 month ago
https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/home-in-or-hone-in
isoprophlex|1 month ago
amatecha|1 month ago
assimpleaspossi|1 month ago
JamesTRexx|1 month ago