Sapces?
228539 6/30/08, 5:39 pm EDTdang! I missed that feature. Where did they hide it? ;)
|
|
Reader reaction
Found 17 comments
Sapces? 228539 6/30/08, 5:39 pm EDTdang! I missed that feature. Where did they hide it? ;) Comment posted by:
Flying Meat
ooooooh yeah! 228542 6/30/08, 6:04 pm EDTbring on teh snappy! Comment posted by:
jimothy
plethora 228545 6/30/08, 6:19 pm EDTmeans "excess" "overabundance". There's never an "excess" of fixes, although there can be a plethora of bugs that require a "profusion" of fixes. Comment posted by:
tomodachi
Not hatin', just sayin' 228548 6/30/08, 6:52 pm EDTFrom our friendly Dictionary app:plethora |?ple??r?|noun ( a plethora of)an excess of (something) : a plethora of committees and subcommittees.• Medicine an excess of a bodily fluid, particularly blood.USAGE NOTEAccording to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) and most other dictionaries, this word refers (and has always referred) to an overabundance, an overfullness, or an excess. Comment posted by:
DCW
re: plethora 228549 6/30/08, 7:00 pm EDTThe thing is, the definitions of words change with usage. Words are often used outside of their original or previous meanings, and you end up with plenty of modern words that have different meanings than they used to. As it is, plethora is probably a good example of this. Certainly the use of "plethora" to simply mean a "whole lot" rather than specifically an excess or overabundance is not correct, but the thing is, the power of usage ends up trumping any dictionary definition. As plethora continues to be used to mean "a whole lot", it will eventually drift into commonly accepted usage and eventually become a legitimate definition and usage of the word. You can't really fight something like that; people can complain about how a word is being used incorrectly, but you can't fight the forces of common usage, right or wrong. Comment posted by:
Elektrix
Elektrix 228554 6/30/08, 7:46 pm EDTyou are correct. Like the word "implode", which used to be a specific scientific term. Yet, when 9/11 happened, the buildings were said to "implode" and thanks to popular usage... the word now means "to collapse" Comment posted by:
eldarkus
my favorite is 228558 6/30/08, 8:19 pm EDTveritable plethera. I use it to mean "a whole lot of a whole lot." Comment posted by:
Flying Meat
Plethora 228563 6/30/08, 8:35 pm EDTThe fun thing about language is that it really cannot be definitively documented. Language evolves, changes, reverts, and constantly maintains fluidity. Language is, at its root, two or more individuals agreeing that abstract gestures (spoken and written words included) mean something greater than themselves. Comment posted by:
phayd
re: eldarkus 228566 6/30/08, 8:50 pm EDTYeah, the Roman elite thought popular usage was crap, too. And look what happened to Latin! Comment posted by:
petsounds
Uh 228572 6/30/08, 9:52 pm EDTBTW,FWIW I h8 when ppl use acronyms in place of idioms. That could be just me. Comment posted by:
godrifle
Your Comments
In order to post comments, you must be a registered member of the
MacNN Forums and logged in. Please login with your MacNN Forums username and password. Not a member of the MacNN forums? Register now for free.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|