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Expressions You Hate!

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Jeff Wrangler:
OK, here's one I ran across in this morning's newspaper: "tasked"  :P

It was in a review of Doubt:

"No, the problem isn't the players. It's with what they're tasked to do."

 :P

A number of appropriate verbs are available to be used in this sentence. It isn't necessary to make a new one out of a noun.

delalluvia:

--- Quote from: Jeff  Wrangler on December 17, 2008, 10:42:46 am ---Here's one that makes me cringe: "Persons" this and "Persons" that!  :P

I know it's done to avoid using "man," but it still drives me crazy because with a little thought I'm sure there is a better way to get around using "man" that substituting "person."

The worst cringe-inducer is the term for an afternoon professional baseball game played on a weekday. These games used to be called "Businessman's Specials," for the "businessmen" who would sneak away from the office to attend them, but that term can't be used anymore, so now they are "Businessperson's Specials."  :P  Since these games are played on a business day, why not "Business Day Special"?

Here's another that relates to local politics.

The members of Philadelphia City Council are elected by district. The members of Council, male and female, are still called "councilmen," and their districts are called "councilmanic districts."  :-*

"Councilmanic" makes me think of a member of the Council jumping around, waving his or her arms in the air, and shrieking hysterically. ...

Would it be so difficult to call the members of Council "representatives," and their districts simply "Council districts"?

--- End quote ---

Heh.  Because to call them "Councilors" is too close in pronunciation to "counselors".

My issue is with title Catholic 'priests' and the desire of women to be - 'female priests'.

Can't they just call them priestesses?  Or is that too old fashion?  Like actors and actresses?  Hero and heroine?

Or is it too pagan?  Too many Steve Reeves biblical epics having influenced an entire world too much to imagine priestesses as anything other than women dancing wildly before pagan idols?

serious crayons:

--- Quote from: delalluvia on December 20, 2008, 02:21:50 am --- Like actors and actresses? 
--- End quote ---

But as it is, I've noticed they're moving toward calling actresses actors. Once or twice, someone has mentioned an actress with an ambiguous name, like maybe Sigourney though not the actual Sigourney, and said "so and so is a really good actor," and I've started to say "wait, isn't so and so a woman?" but then remembered and stopped myself.

Jeff Wrangler:

--- Quote from: serious crayons on December 20, 2008, 02:25:28 am ---But as it is, I've noticed they're moving toward calling actresses actors. Once or twice, someone has mentioned an actress with an ambiguous name, like maybe Sigourney though not the actual Sigourney, and said "so and so is a really good actor," and I've started to say "wait, isn't so and so a woman?" but then remembered and stopped myself.

--- End quote ---

I've noticed that, too, and also comedian being used for both men and women.

Jeff Wrangler:

--- Quote from: delalluvia on December 20, 2008, 02:21:50 am ---Heh.  Because to call them "Councilors" is too close in pronunciation to "counselors".
--- End quote ---

 ???  Nobody suggested councilors. They're all called councilmen now. I suggested representative.


--- Quote ---My issue is with title Catholic 'priests' and the desire of women to be - 'female priests'.
--- End quote ---

Lutherans--and I think Methodists, too--refer to all clergy as pastors, rather than as priests. I've never looked into the derivation of the word, but today anyway it seems to work equally well for both genders.

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