Britva415
"Alabaster," my ass
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2022
- Posts
- 2,992
My whole life, "something of a [noun]" and "somewhat [adjective]" were expressions I heard.
Only in the last 10 years did I ever hear or read the construction, "somewhat of a [noun]."
The first handful of times, I regarded it as a malapropism - someone getting it wrong. But now it's everywhere and I can't point to the last time I came across "something of a [noun]," except in speech with certain people who always said it that way. In writing, it seems like it never comes up anymore and has been utterly replaced with "somewhat of a."
So, is this new? I'm asking for personal experience, not for documentation. OED shows that it's a synonym of "something," including in the "something of a..." construction, but for the life of me I don't know why I never heard it before recently - and why "something of a..." has utterly disappeared.
Only in the last 10 years did I ever hear or read the construction, "somewhat of a [noun]."
The first handful of times, I regarded it as a malapropism - someone getting it wrong. But now it's everywhere and I can't point to the last time I came across "something of a [noun]," except in speech with certain people who always said it that way. In writing, it seems like it never comes up anymore and has been utterly replaced with "somewhat of a."
So, is this new? I'm asking for personal experience, not for documentation. OED shows that it's a synonym of "something," including in the "something of a..." construction, but for the life of me I don't know why I never heard it before recently - and why "something of a..." has utterly disappeared.