Cyclist33
Guest
- Location
- Warrington
I hate the word 'absolutely' which seems to have become incredibly ubiquitous these days![]()
incredibly ubiquitous is tautological. things can only be ubiquitous or not. it's not a comparative state.
I hate the word 'absolutely' which seems to have become incredibly ubiquitous these days![]()
'Happyslapping', there's nothing 'happy' about it, 'cowardly-thuggery' is an appropriate description for this type of behaviour.
Same applies to 'Joy-Riding', and various other misdescriptions of criminal behaviour.
Off topic but I saw a 'happy slapping' on Lewisham station one night.
Thing is the happy slapper picked the wrong person. I have never seen someone react so quick with a punch.
Floored the slapper with a single blow. This of course was caught on camera phone by all his laughing mates.
Yes, but it's definitely more ubiquitous than it used to be.incredibly ubiquitous is tautological. things can only be ubiquitous or not. it's not a comparative state.
Hover Fly of this parish has just shown me a book of Furness dialect words which shows how "craic" was an English word spelled "crack" in the 1860s, which passed into Irish during the 1950s. The Gaelicisation into "craic" is a "faic" encouraged by the Irish tourism industry.Craic !!. i don't understand why it suddenly gets overly used by non Irish at Christmas and the New Year..'the craic should be great'
No-one (barring quite rightly the Irish) uses that word in a day to day setting...