millergrovesue wrote:BillB wrote:I can understand that one. Hot water heater distinguishes it from any other type of heater.
But, why do you need to heat hot water? Unless you want it boiling.
True. It is redundant. Water heater is enough.
millergrovesue wrote:BillB wrote:I can understand that one. Hot water heater distinguishes it from any other type of heater.
But, why do you need to heat hot water? Unless you want it boiling.
GFB wrote:Another annoying Millennial thing..
..at the end of a sentence, your voice raises in pitch.
BigTex wrote:Words like "so" "basically" and "actually" are verbal crutches that buy your brain an extra millisecond to decide what you are going to say.
It shows up in writing as well because some people, like me, write the way they talk.
millergrovesue wrote:BigTex wrote:Words like "so" "basically" and "actually" are verbal crutches that buy your brain an extra millisecond to decide what you are going to say.
It shows up in writing as well because some people, like me, write the way they talk.
I think they probably started that way but have been picked up as habit.
Don't know how many listen to WBAP in the mornings. Have you noticed Brian's habit of saying "To tell the truth....."? I noticed Hal has picked it up now. Always makes me think of the chestnut that states whenever someone says "to make a long story short" you can be sure the story will be very long and when someone says "to tell the truth" you can be sure that the next words out of their mouths will be lies.
crocmommy wrote:Have heard several older people use "at any rate" frequently.
Red Oak wrote:Damn I didn't know I was an Old Person
And "Step Ins" was drawers aka underpants.
Red Oak wrote:My G-Grand Mother called them "step ins", she was born in 1875, so that word goes "way on back yonder".
Red Oak wrote:Yes back before mass communications regionalisms were much more pronounced.
I was 12 years old before I realized "dis sieve nen" and "drecktly" were contractions
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