What do you think the words "awful" and "nice" used to mean? This is absolutely nothing new.
English is a living language and populist use warps and changes the meaning of words. Pedants who can't get passed shit like irregardless or "literally" are going to find themselves in the wrong in the end.
I wrote the book. I wrote the book. It was my book. And it was a No. 1 best-seller, and one of the best-selling business books of all time. Some say it was the best-selling business book ever. (It is not.)
Literally possible.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literally
How long is it gonna take people to adapt to the fact that literally is now also a synonym for figuratively?
Literally possible.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literally
How long is it gonna take people to adapt to the fact that literally is now also a synonym for figuratively?
Literally possible.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literally
How long is it gonna take people to adapt to the fact that literally is now also a synonym for figuratively?
LiterallyAs someone who is not a native speaker, what word do you now use when you want to make clear something is actually meant in a literal sense? The word starts to get the same meaning as it's antonym, makes no sense.
yo is this Bojack Horseman
Reading this has made me very scared.
As someone who is not a native speaker, what word do you now use when you want to make clear something is actually meant in a literal sense? The word starts to get the same meaning as it's antonym, makes no sense.
Goes hand-in-hand with the Trumpification of American society. Words are losing their meaning.
It's not. Merriam Webster is just desperately trying to stay hip. They'll say anything to be popular, just like trump.
I figure a bunch of us will be alive for at least a few more decades -- barring a surprise Trump election -- so quite a while longer. Words mean things.
Great article, OP, thanks.
some people literally cannot adapt to the idea that just being a lazy piece of shit and fucking up word usage is OK. If you do something wrong for so long it becomes right. That sounds like something a trump voter would do.
literally literally meaning figuratively is worse than the whole addicting/addictive mess.
The point was that he's got the attention span of a gnat.Why does it matter if he's read a book or not?
I don't understand how this dumb motherfucker is running for the president of USA.
It speaks to his attention span. Which is that of a gold fish.Why does it matter if he's read a book or not?
Why does it matter if he's read a book or not?
Why does it matter if he's read a book or not?
Maybe he's too busy working...
When Roy Cohn thought that you were an asshole...
The Oxford English Dictionary has said "literally = figuratively" for over 100 years, with the earliest example from 1769:
http://blog.oxforddictionaries.com/2013/08/literally/
I'm not sure I want the most powerful county in the world to be run by someone doesn't have the patience for reading, and therefore, learning.
Because theres a lot of dumb motherfuckers i this country who will vote for him.I don't understand how this dumb motherfucker is running for the president of USA.
So the whole world has been using the term incorrectly all these decades?
The world has been using it correctly. It has two meanings, based on context, just like "cleave" has two meaning based on context. Sanction means to permit as well as to penalize for something not permitted. Bolt means to leave and it also means to fasten together.
This isn't an ad hominem, though.America, please take your cue from Brexit, remember we are in a dark timeline. You need an intelligent, powerful and robust platform for dismantling this guy, the ad hominem most likely will just work in his favour!
yo is this Bojack Horseman
2. I'd like my leaders to be intellectually curious.
Yeah, but unlike those three words, "literally" is the only homonym I can think of where I never heard people use it for something other than "actually" (or at least, not knowingly).
Sure. The reason I said that is being a reader is an easy way for me to tell if someone is intellectually curious.You can be intellectually curious without reading books.
Literally possible.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literally
How long is it gonna take people to adapt to the fact that literally is now also a synonym for figuratively?
I hear it and read it all the time. It was in this very thread. Mark Twain used it in "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer", F. Scott Fitzgerald used it in "The Great Gatsby" and James Joyce used it in "Ulysses". Louisa May Alcott, Jane Austen, et al used it. If you've never heard people use it in the figurative sense, you may need to listen and read more.
A word being literally synonymous with its own antonym will literally never stop being ridiculous. It's functionally a worthless word if you accept both definitions.
Context exists. I don't know what it is about this word that brings out the inner semantic arbiters in everyone.A word being literally synonymous with its own antonym will literally never stop being ridiculous. It's functionally a worthless word if you accept both definitions.
Thats your right, but then you should have just remained silent. I just want to tell you that I think youre very disloyal. Without me, you wouldnt be where you are now. I had a lot of choice of who to have write the book, and I chose you, and I was very generous with you. I know that you gave a lot of speeches and lectures using The Art of the Deal. I could have sued you, but I didnt.
My business has nothing to do with The Art of the Deal.
Thats not what Ive been told.
Youre running for President of the United States. The stakes here are high.
Yeah, they are, he said. Have a nice life. Trump hung up.
I know I wouldn't want to be a political journalist under a Trump administration.Uhm, should we in Europe prepare for a wave of political refugees?
I know I wouldn't want to be a political journalist under a Trump administration.
You can be intellectually curious without reading books.
Oh, I'm aware. But the bowel-disruptor technology isn't there yet, unfortunately.
Literally possible.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literally
How long is it gonna take people to adapt to the fact that literally is now also a synonym for figuratively?
Literally
Usually it boils down to context and tone
you used it