I despise the pronunciation of "applicable" with the emphasis on the second syllable vs the first - "uh-PLICK-able" vs "APP-lick-able."
I know they are variants and both OK, but "aPLICKA-able" sounds stoopid. And (literally, in the correct way) EVERYBODY I work with says it the dumb way.
There's another word that ~85% of people I interact with in a particular setting say in a massively gear-grinding way. It's a fairly specialized word, so might not resonate with anyone here, but people say "complainant" as if it's "complainTant." Tf, people, yes, those people are registering complaints, but they are not complainting!
Since I'm getting it all out today, I also dislike the way people lately often do a weird thing cutting off/swallowing the "t" before -ant*. So, saying "important" like impor [tiny r]- [break]-ant, rather than impor[t]-ent...
I don't personally have the linguistic vocabulary to give the technical description, but
this describes it (glottoral!) It's very Gen Z, especially among women - WHY.
* AND half of the people saying "complaintant" say it with this same stupid swallowed t, too. It's like they're doing it on purpose to murder me.
Why have who and whom? Who even uses whom?
(I do.) But in work writing (even formal documents) I do consider whether a sentence can be restructed to avoid it, both because it's now super-formal/unusual, and because it's very misused - and the last thing I want is some person who doesn't know how to use it correctly thinking my correct usage is incorrect.
If the point of business writing is clarity, I'll aim for that (even if I personally find an extra-formal phrasing perfectly clear).
zoomers using the word 'underrated' and 'ahead of their time' to simply mean 'i like this thing."
I think it has already been included in this thread, but "iconic" is used similarly lately and I HATE it.
People speak with words so strong that they are suddenly at a loss for words more than ever and I fear that they are also altering perception at times. I hope that one day people will read more books, physical, electronic or even audio just to help broaden their vocabulary.
I agree with this completely.
The entirety of the French Language, from the ways words are pronounced to how they are spelt, but especially the concept of silent consonants. It's just Germanic rapebaby Latin with Celtic cuckery tossed in. At least Romanians have the excuse that they are surrounded by Slavs. French "people" stop speaking that godawful language.
I hope a Disagree rating is a neutral rating, because I don't mean to give you negatives, but I love French, so I had to.