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escort - can we bring back the "E", please?


Smurof
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I think it is the influence of English learners. I noticed in many South American countries the word "scort" is used frequently. I also noticed in this board that when the shorter form is used, the poster is probably not a native English speaker,

 

Bad news for some of you: we have no control on how language evolves, specially after the Cloud and globalization. If the "e" initial is finally dropped, I would be glad. One less character for tweets!

 

lol, it reminds me of back in the day when I used to “start up” on gay.com. Back then, the word generous wouldn’t get you banned, like the Grindr police do. Guys in Miami would frequently ask me, “are you a scort?”

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The use of language is a method of communication.

 

Did the writer convey what they meant?

 

Escort or Scott - I think we all know what the meaning is.

 

While I support the use of high language, I find it impossible to maintain.

 

I lived in a number of countries growing up, every time we moved it was a different schooling system, and there are some gaps in my education.

 

Having said that I did get a graduate degree, ( I do have an essay with the comment, you use of language is 3rd rate journalise) and am employed as a communicator in emergency services.

 

grammar and correct spelling is not that important when someone is having bullets fired at them, or someone is having a cardiac arrest.

 

So Yes its great to maintain standards, but when the so called Grammar Police come out, I just find it a superior attitude looking down on the rest of us. The is not a positive experience except for the bully saying the words.

 

I am sure I am being offensive here but - honesty is always good

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It's when people get idioms wrong that I really find it interesting. Things we say as a matter of course that clearly don't always get translated well into writing. I've often seen things in personal ads or escort descriptions, like someone claiming their thicker body shape was "stalky," or someone saying that a certain attribute they liked in a guy was "not set in a stone."

 

There are misheard phrases like "for all intensive purposes" or "forcive habit"- and I once had a student write a theatre analysis paper claiming that one character "reeked havoc" with another. Or when Kramer on Seinfeld refused to believe that the phrase wasn't "statue of limitations." :)

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It's when people get idioms wrong that I really find it interesting. Things we say as a matter of course that clearly don't always get translated well into writing. I've often seen things in personal ads or escort descriptions, like someone claiming their thicker body shape was "stalky," or someone saying that a certain attribute they liked in a guy was "not set in a stone."

 

There are misheard phrases like "for all intensive purposes" or "forcive habit"- and I once had a student write a theatre analysis paper claiming that one character "reeked havoc" with another. Or when Kramer on Seinfeld refused to believe that the phrase wasn't "statue of limitations." :)

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It's when people get idioms wrong that I really find it interesting. Things we say as a matter of course that clearly don't always get translated well into writing. I've often seen things in personal ads or escort descriptions, like someone claiming their thicker body shape was "stalky," or someone saying that a certain attribute they liked in a guy was "not set in a stone."

 

There are misheard phrases like "for all intensive purposes" or "forcive habit"- and I once had a student write a theatre analysis paper claiming that one character "reeked havoc" with another. Or when Kramer on Seinfeld refused to believe that the phrase wasn't "statue of limitations." :)

 

"far and few between"

"doggy dog world"

"I could care less"

"one in the same"

"nip it in the butt"

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It's when people get idioms wrong that I really find it interesting. Things we say as a matter of course that clearly don't always get translated well into writing. I've often seen things in personal ads or escort descriptions, like someone claiming their thicker body shape was "stalky," or someone saying that a certain attribute they liked in a guy was "not set in a stone."

 

There are misheard phrases like "for all intensive purposes" or "forcive habit"- and I once had a student write a theatre analysis paper claiming that one character "reeked havoc" with another. Or when Kramer on Seinfeld refused to believe that the phrase wasn't "statue of limitations." :)

 

"far and few between"

"doggy dog world"

"I could care less"

"one in the same"

"nip it in the butt"

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"I could care less"

 

I wrestle with this one - because though it's wrong, I also think a lot of people use it in a facetious way, so that it's actually correct in their own context. But there are also surely people who don't realize it's not quite right.

 

Similar to "begs the question," which really doesn't mean what a lot of people think it does, but then again, I think that "wrong" usage of it has come to be acceptable anyway.

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"I could care less"

 

I wrestle with this one - because though it's wrong, I also think a lot of people use it in a facetious way, so that it's actually correct in their own context. But there are also surely people who don't realize it's not quite right.

 

Similar to "begs the question," which really doesn't mean what a lot of people think it does, but then again, I think that "wrong" usage of it has come to be acceptable anyway.

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