Lathe Biosas wrote:Can I add the fact that no one at the store I go to understands the word "decimated/decimate."
Next time, show them
this Doctor Who moment. A true villain chooses his words carefully.
BorderCountess wrote:
Whether it's during a game or not, it's people who use the word 'literally' figuratively. If you ever tell me you are 'literally on fire' I'm grabbing a fire extinguisher.
I am, perhaps irrationally, not bothered by that overmuch. They're using 'literally' as an intensifier for a figurative phrase. It's the equivalent of a word like 'very'. It's perfect for the job.
Suppose you're in the habit of saying "I'm on fire!" when you're not, in fact, on fire. You're simply saying the weather is too hot, or you're having a moment of incredible skill or luck with dice during a game, or similar. Or you find something so funny that you announce "I'm dead!" or "I died laughing!" when you are clearly still alive. You're already saying that something is happening when it isn't. Well, how do you express that figurative sentiment even more strongly than usual? What do you say when the temperature hits an all-time high or the joke is even funnier than the norm? You say it's
literally happening when it's literally not. It's the same as saying, "I
really am on fire!" or "I'm
actually dead!" It's obvious to everyone that you are not really on fire and you are not actually dead, just as it was obvious that you were not on fire and you were not dead. It's clear from context that the thing you are saying is literally happening is
not literally happening ... which is why you are saying it's literally happening. What could underline your figurative point more than using the literal word 'literal' figuratively?
In fact, using 'literally' this way can help to emphasise that you're being figurative. If you shout "I'M ON FIRE!" or "I REALLY
AM ON FIRE!" people might come running with the fire extinguisher in genuine concern. At the very least there may be a split second of uncertainty while they try to work out whether your hair has caught alight or you just rolled another six. But if you shout "I'M
LITERALLY ON FIRE" people will know the fire extinguisher is not needed.
You said you'd be grabbing the fire extinguisher if someone used 'literally' that way. I'm pretty sure you're being figurative and don't actually intend to follow through on your threatened action ... but I'm not completely certain. If you said "I'm literally grabbing the fire extinguisher," though, I'd be 100% sure.
/pedant mode off
'Underrated', now. That always gets to me. People keep calling highly rated, well-respected and critically acclaimed things underrated. Games, books, films. What they actually mean is 'not well known' or 'obscure' or 'nobody I know talks about this enough'. Never mind that it's won awards.
Oh, yeah ... and 'very unique'. It's either unique or it's not!