Where did this 'gifted' shit come from?

jaF0

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I 'gifted' something to someone.

I was 'gifted' something.

What the fuck happened to 'I gave someone a gift' and 'I received a gift'?

Were these fucking idiots who use 'gifted' in some sort of school for the gifted as kids?
 
Same place phrases like "good optics" and shit like that come from. Some stick and stay with us for the long haul and some last a few months and are forgotten.
A lot of our old turns of phrase are going away simply because they make even less sense now than they did before due to tech changes, lifestyle changes, etc.
One I wonder about is the way people motion to roll down your car window. The cranking motion is still very much accepted and understood but for how long?
 
The one that gets me is "reached out to me/him/her". What they really mean is "called" or "texted". To me, "reached out", means asking for advice.

I am guilty of the "gifted" though. Not sure why I started using it but it usually applies to things I don't want.
 
The one that gets me is "reached out to me/him/her". What they really mean is "called" or "texted". To me, "reached out", means asking for advice.

I am guilty of the "gifted" though. Not sure why I started using it but it usually applies to things I don't want.

Not nearly as bad as "hit me up."
 
That's what they say and yet nobody back then said it. It didn't start being used that way until a few years ago.

Yeah, I don't recall hearing it on the regular until years later but the marketing campaign was highly successful and it stayed in our collective consciousness so ultimately was used in shorter form later on.
That's my theory anyway.
 
I love it when "the geriatric" get all "up in arms" over "newfangled" thingamabobs. :D
 
I'll wrap myself up in them to keep me warm at night, thank you very much.

You'll just have to use your chins. :D

You know what's cool about all those "chins" you mentioned?

You can lift them yourself without using your hands.
 
Could it be influence of non-native users who come from languages with unbroken word-making tools?

I for once can't wrap my mind about the "not-a-word" concept, if it can be constructed using basic grammar (or analogy, at worst) it does have inherent meaning just form that. Then, my native language have over eight hundred analytical forms for a verb, so that's me.
 
This thread just made me realise that there is no word for the opposite of a gerund.
 
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