Words I Hate

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I think what I don't like most about people who use cringe as an adjective is how ungrammatical it sounds. Cring(e)y or cringeworthy would be better.
 
I think what I don't like most about people who use cringe as an adjective is how ungrammatical it sounds. Cring(e)y or cringeworthy would be better.

In the 1990s, Bill Waterson famously said "verbing weirds language".

In the last decade, I've found adjectifying weirds conversations.

Must be a product of its times.
 
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In the 1990s, Bill Waterson famously said "verbing weirds language".

In the last decade, I've found adjectifying weirds conversations.

Must be a product of its times.
This is America. WE have the freedom to verb all nouns. No exceptions.
 
Guess I'll pull the old man yelling at clouds with people finding a different usage for a word...

"Cook" or "Cooked"

Seeing it used like:

"Did I cook!?" (Someone posting in a collecting subreddit asking if they did well with their purchase/haul)

"Is DC comics cooked!?!?!?" (Even a "news" site/blog asking if something is screwed or in trouble)

Yeah, guess this is another "am I getting old?" post. Felt that way 5 years or so ago when a co-worker would use "Gucci" instead of "good" as a word. "Yo, we're gucci."
 
Guess I'll pull the old man yelling at clouds with people finding a different usage for a word...

"Cook" or "Cooked"

Seeing it used like:

"Did I cook!?" (Someone posting in a collecting subreddit asking if they did well with their purchase/haul)

"Is DC comics cooked!?!?!?" (Even a "news" site/blog asking if something is screwed or in trouble)
Seems to me these are both shortened forms of existing idioms, "cooking with fire" and "your goose is cooked."
 
Unplayable. (at least in the context of video games)
Okay, I talked briefly about this years ago, but I've come to dislike this word a lot more than I did then, and I want to go a bit more in-depth since I have more to say about it now.

This is one of those terms that gets used so loosely these days. I feel like it has lost its meaning over the years because of this. For instance, people will often describe a game, or something in a game, that's either very boring, difficult, frustrating, doesn't look good, or one that doesn't quite run at a desired framerate, as "unplayable", and even worse, I've seen people describe these things as "literally unplayable", when that really isn't the case. To me, if a game either refuses to even boot up when attempting to play it or if something in the game doesn't work at all and/or crashes immediately upon trying to use it, that is what I think of as unplayable. The way I look at it is, if you can do anything at all with it, then it's not unplayable.

I understand figure of speech is a thing, but I feel like this goes a bit beyond that, and it really strikes me as a term that has been used so loosely, it doesn't have much value anymore.
 
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