Meanie. (Albeit an extremely informative meanie.)Skiprr wrote:pistol pistol Pistol pistol
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Meanie. (Albeit an extremely informative meanie.)Skiprr wrote:pistol pistol Pistol pistol
AndyC wrote:You just have to use your discretionELB wrote:I mentioned the confusion between "discreet" and "discrete" about 47 pages ago, but I keep seeing it all over the place and it justme.
I only looked at online versions, but every dictionary that I could find disagrees with you on this one.Magnawing wrote:Orientate...you can orient something or you can determine it's orientation....orientate is NOT a word. I've had this discussion with several teachers throughout my childrens' school careers.
If you could find a dictionary that was 25+ years old, you would most likely find that "orientate" did not exist in the American English language until it became used so frequently (albeit incorrectly) that it has become accepted as a real word and included into dictionaries. Kind of like internet, and many other "words" that have weaseled their way into our daily language. Although, you will never hear me utter the word "orientate" unless it is to complain about people saying "orientate" when that actually mean "orient". I believe this came into general usage on college campuses when students would have to attend freshman "orientation"...they had to get "orientated" to the campus and college life. Maybe the first class should have been Grammar and the English Language?3dfxMM wrote:I only looked at online versions, but every dictionary that I could find disagrees with you on this one.Magnawing wrote:Orientate...you can orient something or you can determine it's orientation....orientate is NOT a word. I've had this discussion with several teachers throughout my childrens' school careers.
I'm one of those geeks who owns a hard-copy, 16-volume set of the 1978 Oxford English Dictionary. "Orientate" appears on page 200 of volume VII; first recorded use 1849 in Ecclesiologist IX; other usage examples from 1850, 1866, 1877, 1880, 1883, 1884, and 1886.Magnawing wrote:If you could find a dictionary that was 25+ years old, you would most likely find that "orientate" did not exist in the American English language until it became used so frequently (albeit incorrectly) that it has become accepted as a real word and included into dictionaries. Kind of like internet, and many other "words" that have weaseled their way into our daily language.3dfxMM wrote:I only looked at online versions, but every dictionary that I could find disagrees with you on this one.Magnawing wrote:Orientate...you can orient something or you can determine it's orientation....orientate is NOT a word. I've had this discussion with several teachers throughout my childrens' school careers.
How about pistil? And stamen. :evil2:fickman wrote:Use any synonym, euphemism, or colloquialism that you want and I'll go right along. Say "pistol" and I'll look like I just ate a lemon.