• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

words you hate??

NeoIkaruGAF

Gold Member
Basically.
Incredibly.

Two words that have been abused to hell and back in the last 5 years or so.
I remember a GDQ from a few years ago. “So, want to explain how the game works?” “Yeah, so basically… basically… basically this, basically that”. In every sentence.

And for some zoomers, everything is incredibly offensive, incredibly amazing, incredibly rude, incredibly expensive, incredibly worse, etc.
 

Rayderism

Member
"Mandatory" is a word that needs to be banned from my job's vocabulary. To me, it's as bad as a white guy saying the N-word.
 

YCoCg

Gold Member
Woke, it's become a lazy go to word for describing anything you don't like in the same way Nazi is used to describe someone you disagree with.
 

Radioskugga

Member
moist

supposedly

problematic

.....not in any order
tenor.gif

tenor.gif
 
Last edited:
I got a few:

Supposibly - I heard a news anchor pronounce it like this... IT'S SUPPOSEDLY, YOU CHILD.
🤦‍♂️

Would of - no.

Defiantly, instead of Definitely - say the word out loud before you type it, because shit like this makes you look dopey.
 

Humdinger

Gold Member
"Inappropriate." As in, "That behavior is inappropriate."

I used to hear it at work all the time, directed at the clients we worked with. I started to detest the word, because it felt so school-marmy and controlling.
 

Drake

Member
Notoriety. Not because I hate the word itself, but because I see it used wrong all the time. It means being well known for a negative trait or evil act, but a lot of uses I see are just for being famous or well known in general.
 
Last edited:
I got a few:

Supposibly - I heard a news anchor pronounce it like this... IT'S SUPPOSEDLY, YOU CHILD.
🤦‍♂️
Ahem, 'tis spelled supposably, a real word both subtle and gross.

I can't rate this news anchor's usage without the full context, which supposably could have been correct for all I know.
Oh, come now friend, as an audiophile, supposably you might enjoy eclectic guitar.
Rachel Dratch Snl GIF by Saturday Night Live
 
Last edited:

Rran

Member
I wish people would STFU about "moist" already. Someone wrote a fluff piece about it a decade ago and now all of a sudden everyone can't stand it? I'd much rather something be moist than damp. Get that damp cupcake outta here.
"Whataboutism" - Resetera favourite.
"Whataboutism" is just a stupid way to say tu quoque. I dislike the dumbing down of language.
 
Last edited:

Humdinger

Gold Member
Concerning

!!

Yes, that's another one. "Concern." "I have a concern about..." "We are concerned about..."

We're all familiar with "concern trolling" on forums. How I saw it used at work was different. Talking about a "concern" was a polite way to say something like "I think this guy has real problems" or "I disagree with that" or "This is screwed up." Instead of saying it directly, you express a "concern" - it makes you sound neutral, objective and "caring." I used it a lot myself, but I got sick of it.
 

Durien

Member
Unalive...seriously wtf..I was reading a post that read , "She unalived herself." Do schools teach English and Composition anymore? I know they don't teach spelling...
 

E-Cat

Member
Yes, that's another one. "Concern." "I have a concern about..." "We are concerned about..."

We're all familiar with "concern trolling" on forums. How I saw it used at work was different. Talking about a "concern" was a polite way to say something like "I think this guy has real problems" or "I disagree with that" or "This is screwed up." Instead of saying it directly, you express a "concern" - it makes you sound neutral, objective and "caring." I used it a lot myself, but I got sick of it.
It was specifically a Musk reply tweet style reference, btw
 
Last edited:
Some version of "bro" being used as punctuation and people who, like, really like to, like, slip in that fucking word "like" like it's one of the, like, few words they like to use when, like, it's nothing about liking what they, like, like.
 
Top Bottom