That's a perfectly cromulent word.
I told myself I'd never use cromulent on GAF, but now that you've done it I can.
You broke the seal.
That's a perfectly cromulent word.
It's not fine, because it makes no sense whatsoever. "Sure, fat chance!" is ok, because it's always said sarcastically. "I could care less" is not, it's just wrong. Like "irregardless".
I'm also here to defend "could care less". It's a classic sarcastic understatement.
Also, the meaning is total clear in context. No one has ever said "I could care less" and meant "I care a lot".
The problem with the phrase is that a lot of people who use it are simply unaware that it's supposed to be a sarcastic phrase. Next time you hear someone use it ask them to think about it, $10 says they haven't and are just repeating it.
I told myself I'd never use cromulent on GAF, but now that you've done it I can.
You broke the seal.
'fair' can mean : free from bias, dishonesty, or injusticeI love using 'To be fair' and then saying something completely unfair like:
"To be fair, I thought you'd be dead by now."
or
"To be fair, you're much poorer than me so I don't care about you."
Isn't "I could've cared less" better?
When people say "I could care less." I think it should be "I couldn't care less" because it makes more logical sense, but some people will die on that molehill.
'fair' can mean : free from bias, dishonesty, or injustice
So you can also use 'to be fair' as 'to be honest'
I don't understand where anyone got the idea to pronounce iron like "eye-urn".
I don't understand where anyone got the idea to pronounce iron like "eye-urn".
Could care less.
^ thisyolo
Not sure if serious...How is it pronounced?
It does ? Now I'm confused as hell.And yet, the phrase "all but forgotten" means something IS forgotten.
"All but forgotten"
All = Everything
But = Except
So if something is "everything except forgotten" that means it's not forgotten. It might be stupid. It might be ugly. It might be purple or pink. But there's one thing it isn't and that's forgotten.
And yet, the phrase "all but forgotten" means something IS forgotten.
I fucking _HATE_ that so much. I hate it. It's a bug in the English language.
I think it means 99.9% forgotten but slightly remembered.
For all the people saying this, it is obviously meant as a sarcastic comment.
Not sure if serious...
It clearly isn't. It doesn't even make sense sarcastically in the way it's commonly used.
Steven Pinker said:A tin ear for stress and melody, and an obliviousness to the principles of discourse and rhetoric, are important tools of the trade for the language maven. Consider an alleged atrocity committed by today's youth: the expression [I could care less]. The teenagers are trying to express disdain, the adults note, in which case they should be saying [I couldn't care less]. If they could care less than they do, that means that they really do care, the opposite of what they are trying to say. But if these dudes would stop ragging on teenagers and scope out the construction, they would see that their argument is bogus. Listen to how the two versions are pronounced: COULDN'T care I LE CARE i ESS. LE could ESS. The melodies and stresses are completely different, and for a good reason. The second version is not illogical, it's [sarcastic]. The point of sarcasm is that by making an assertion that is manifestly false or accompanied by ostentatiously mannered intonation, one deliberately implies its opposite. A good paraphrase is, "Oh yeah, as if there were something in the world that I care less about."
It clearly isn't. It doesn't even make sense sarcastically in the way it's commonly used.
Somebody doesn't care, so they say claim that they do care sarcastically. What doesn't make sense there?
It's a lame way of expressing ones-self, I'll agree there. It makes sense though.
Cakewalk and fat chance. Walking with a cake isn't that easy, you know. And why is fat chance the same as slim chance, when fat is the opposite of slim? Kinda silly, if you ask me.
Yes, I stole these from Cougar Town
I mean, yeah, technically it's sarcastic. But 99% of the time you hear people say it, it's pretty clear they don't mean it sarcastically.
I know people who use the 'phrase', and I know when they're being sarcastic. And trust me they aren't when they say could care less.
I couldn't care less and I could care less are said with different intonations, at least here in the northwest where I am from. There is definitely a sarcastic component to it.