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Ask in bid-ask spread gives rise to What's the ask[ing price]? But as a synonym for question? Gross.
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I’m sure I would have misheard “bid-ask” as “big a**” and would’ve been asking them to repeat it.
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Fortunately, we still have one word that can be used as Adverb, Adjective, Noun, Verb, etc. I learned the proper usage in the service back in the '50's.
>64
Some days the dragon wins. Suck it up.
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Go forth and multiply?
Who the f*** is General Failure, and why is he reading my harddisk?
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Is "verbification" self-descriptive? Let me google that...
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One that grinds my gears is "Please revert" meaning please reply.
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If someone asked me to please revert I'd revert my latest code changes
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We are currently moving databases from one environment to another. We have automated the process to include moving the database back to its original location if needed. The guy who built that part even went as far as to think about "What if they decide to move it over to the new location again?" So he built into the code the logic for, and this is what he called it, "Rereverting" the database.
I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.
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When I was a lad "alternate" was pronounced "alt-er-nate" and meant 'to switch back end forth between two options'.
It seems to be used as a replacement for alternative in North America. I always find that odd.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Alternate shouldn't be used in place of alternative unless there are only two of them.
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As far as I can tell (in NA anyway) "alternate" is officially both a noun and verb.
Verb - Occurring or succeeding by turns
Noun - One that substitutes for another
Seems official rather than regional slang or misuse.
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It's also an adjective as in "alternate facts"!
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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Yeah, no, it depends on context. Maybe kinda time-sensitive.
There may be several alternatives until a choice is made and then you have decided on an alternate.
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I tend to pronounce the verb with a “nate” ending which rhymes with number eight and the noun with a “nit/net” ending.
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Brings back memories of a high school sports cheer:
What do we got?
We got a lot!
We got a team that's Red Hot!
(We were a very sophisticated group of students back in the early 1970's. )
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You should hear Virgin Mobile's robo-voice. It seems to target British pre-teens.
/ravi
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Be thankful that their target demographic isn't Valley girls!
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Their voicemail prompts use "hit" for "press", "scratch" for "delete" and a host of other substitutions that make no sense to me. I grew up speaking the queen's English, so I dare say I know a thing or two about the language. Also, their robovoice is a thickly accented British female. I appreciate the local slant, but for a North American market?
/ravi
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I remember my first consulting job in the states... I was given the wrong address and the lady at the reception called the other office (where I should have been) and said, "I have a consultant with a really cute British accent here looking for xxx"... I've never heard a Cumbrian accent[^] called cute before... and never again since...
Who the f*** is General Failure, and why is he reading my harddisk?
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As a lifetime resident of Georgia, USA, I "mash" buttons. So it could be worse.
I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.
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As a lifetime lover of potatoes, I do the same.
/ravi
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