Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

THE average human says thousands of words a day, so a few of them are bound to be out of place.

There are lots of common words in our complicated language that have lost their meaning with time, or that have had their definitions rewritten by incorrect use over the years.

Here's a list of 10 words that you're probably not using correctly anymore.

LITERALLY

How it's often used: If I see one more person wearing those pants, I'm literally going to go blind.

Why that's wrong: Because you're not going to go blind. The word is incorrectly used to add emphasis to a sentence, when it really means to take a word in its usual or most basic sense without exaggeration.

Yes, you'll find a dictionary definition of the incorrect use, and linguists argue it's been around for a century or longer, but it's informal. And it ain't right.

ULTIMATE

How it's often used: The sundae was the ultimate chocolate indulgence.

Why that's wrong: Ultimate doesn't mean the pinnacle or the best of something, although that's how it's regularly used. It means the last on a list of things, e.g. Their ultimate goal was to win the premiership.

RANDOM

How it's often used: That girl is such a random.

Why that's wrong: Random describes something that happens without method or decision, like random violence or random samples in an experiment. It doesn't mean someone who's odd, unusual or does unexpected things.

IRREGARDLESS

How it's often used: I'll never talk to him again, irregardless of an apology.

Why that's wrong: Because irregardless isn't a word. You're thinking of "regardless".

WOULD OF/SHOULD OF/COULD OF/MUST OF

How it's often used: I would of gone to the shops that afternoon but it rained.

Why that's wrong: The correct contractions are would've/should've/could've/must've. Some people hear the apostrophe-v-e as the word "of". Not right.

IRONIC

How it's often used: It's a death row pardoned two minutes too late/And isn't it ironic?

Why that's wrong: We have Alanis Morissette to blame for many of the wrongly deployed examples of irony in the world today. Irony doesn't refer to really bad things like a black fly in your chardonnay or 10,000 spoons when all you need is a knife. Something is ironic when it is the opposite of what's expected, often in a way that causes wry amusement.

PERUSE

How it's often used: I quickly perused the aisles to see if there was anything I needed.

Why that's wrong: To peruse something means to pay close attention to it, not just to quickly scan it.

ANNIVERSARY

How it's often used: Today is our six-month anniversary.

Why that's wrong: Congrats on reaching that milestone and everything, but an anniversary is technically something that happens once a year. The Latin root "annus" means "year". Maybe the "monthversary" should become a thing?

OVER

How it's often used: There were over 100 people at the party.

Why that's wrong: "Over" should not be used when referring to a number. Use "more than" instead - e.g. There were more than 100 people at the party. The only exception is when you're talking about someone's age, e.g. He is over 40.

DECIMATE

How it's often used: The storm decimated the small village.

Why that's wrong: You'll often hear this word used on the news after a natural disaster when a cyclone decimates a fishing village or a tornado decimates a stadium. But it really means to kill one in every ten, e.g. The colonel decimated the large group of prisoners. Nowadays though, it's acceptable to use the "decimate" when any large proportion of something is killed or destroyed.

 

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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong


@**meep** wrote:

@nevillesdaughter wrote:

Guaranteed to make me grind my teeth and rant is the misuse of suspicious - as in a suspicious looking package. The package is not sitting there suspecting others, it is a SUSPECT package!

 


 

Cheers,

Marina.


 

If something causes suspicion, isn't it suspicious? Its an adjective, not a verb ???

 

 

 


A package or object can not be full of suspicion - something causing suspicion is suspect. Suspicious is an adjective but means having suspicions, which an inanimate object cannot do, not causing them.

 

Marina.

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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

Believing that someone has probably done something wrong:

Colleagues became suspicious when he started acting strangely.

Making you believe something is wrong, dangerous or illegal:

The customers noticed a suspicious package.


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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

I flinch when I see over and over again, "I payed for the item."

The word is "paid" not payed.

 

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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

I remember some years ago there was a full page advertisement in a glossy magazine for a penthouse with Sydney Harbour views.

The huge heading across the top of the ad. was "THE PENULTIMATE PENTHOUSE".

I 'phoned  the agent (I think it was Bridges) and explained the meaning of the word.

I can't even begin to imagine  how many hands (and eyes) this ad. went through prior to printing.

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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

I always have a chuckle when I read ads that proclaim "Hurry, won't last long at this price.' It makes me want to ask, "Will I get my money back if it falls apart in the first week?"

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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

I thought it was:

 

The Kiwi eats, roots, and leaves?

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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

My peeve is, "How excitement."

 

 

 photo GRUMPYCATSIGN_zpsa8f18bba.jpg
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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong


@**meep** wrote:

 

 

 

 

Re "suspicious" though, I'm actually not 100% sure.  I suspect I may be correct. mischief.gif


susยทpiยทcious  (s-spshs)

adj.
1. Arousing or apt to arouse suspicion; questionable: suspicious behavior.
2. Tending to suspect; distrustful: a suspicious nature.
3. Expressing suspicion: a suspicious look.
 
I had to look it up myselof meep, lol.  
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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

Speaking of "shown" , it drives me mad when people pronounce it showen (likewise growen, throwen knowen etc)

 

I too loathed "shown" pronounced that way, until a friend, who is from northern NSW used it.  This friend is well versed in the English language and she claims that is the way she's always pronounced it.  If you listen to some news reporters you will notice they say "showen" etc as well.

 

I believe it's more a regional dialect than an ignorance of proper speech.  The same way that some Victorians pronounce school "skewl".

 

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Ten Words People Always Get Wrong

When my children were young, I always got mad at them for saying "me brother, me mother or me books, etc" It took a long while to make them realise the right word was "My"  Just a habit the kids got into and would have taken into adulthood.

 

 

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