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    <title>Smiley&#39;s Tropical Escape</title>
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    <updated>2007-06-10T10:20:48Z</updated> 
    <author>
        <name>Smiley</name>
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    <id>tag:vox.com,2006:6p00c2251e70a18e1d/tags/expressionistically/</id> 
    <subtitle>Sad Songs on a Broken Ukelele</subtitle>  
    
    <entry>
        <title>Words</title>   
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        <published>2007-06-06T00:36:47Z</published>
        <updated>2007-06-10T10:20:48Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>Smiley</name>
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        <p>English grammar is...well, there&#39;s not one single adjective that seems to work.&#160; After all, English is a mish-mash and hodge-podge of the Romance and Germanic languages, not to mention being a common tongue, trade language, and tourist language.&#160; All of which means that for any given grammar rule, there is at least one exception.&#160; </p><p>In fact, it can even be argued that American English and U.K. English
are splitting into two different languages as the grammar continues to
evolve.&#160; For example, think about British speakers saying &quot;haven&#39;t got&quot;
while American speakers say only &quot;don&#39;t have&quot; - there are two different
contractions used, plus the additional word for two phrases with
exactly the same usage.&#160; As a second example, for Americans, when was
the last time you used the past perfect tense correctly in daily
conversation?&#160; For most of us, we rely on Simple Past or Past
Continuous to get us through without any worry about miscommunication,
and it works just fine.</p><p>Which brings me back to English grammar being...confucked is a good word I think.</p><p>(&quot;Confucked&quot; was coined by a college roommate who was having some problems with a girl.&#160; He walked into the apartment one afternoon and said, &quot;She has me so fucking confused I&#39;m confucked&quot;.&#160; It may not be the most proper of etymologies, but it works for me.)</p><p>In addition, English, like all languages, is constantly evolving and changing; especially as more and more people begin to speak it as a second or third language, local uses continue to arise.&#160; Also, new words are coined, or more usually, borrowed from other languages on an almost daily basis.</p><p>Having said all that, there is one grammatical mis-step that annoys me to no end.&#160; It is the use of &quot;literally&quot; when people actually mean &quot;figuratively&quot;.&#160; Example:&#160; I literally died laughing.&#160; Really?&#160; When was your funeral and why are you here?</p><p>So.</p><p>A few weekends ago I was having coffee with some friends.&#160; I forget exactly what I said but it involved the use of the word proverbial.&#160; My friend looked at me and said, with gentle mocking, &quot;is that really a proverb?&quot;&#160; As my comment had been somewhat profane, I had to admit that, in fact, it most likely was not a proverb. &#160;</p><p>So, in the interest of linguistic harmony, I now propose the extended and repeated use of the words &quot;idiomatically&quot;, &quot;figuratively&quot;, and &quot;expressionistically&quot; to match phrases that are, in fact, well known idioms, figures of speech, or expressions.</p><p>I would like this to spread.&#160; I would like to hear conversations on the street full of people saying things like &quot;It was raining the idiomatic cats and dogs, you know?&quot;&#160; or &quot;I figuratively stepped in dog poo at the office today&quot; or even &quot;Expressionistically speaking, it&#39;s going to be one of those days&quot;</p><p>And the next time you hear someone say that they did something literally, stop them and point them to this post.</p><p>Thanks.<br /></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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