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this post was submitted on 16 Sep 2024
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Asklemmy
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But if everyone is using it to mean something new then we need to record that.
But that is literally why we have many of the definitions accepted as standard today.
"Literally" officially meaning "figuratively" radicalized me.
Lear Welsh or French. They're both Prescriptive languages where that is (officially) true. English, however, is a descriptive language which means the dictionary is there to record how language is used not to define how it should be used
Must be embarrassing to not understand that living languages evolve.
I think that's polarising because using a weird incorrectly does not change its meaning; it's far more subtle than that
That's so fetch.