The "I don't want to talk about AI" thread, and the new topic is: should we really be talking about our dreams?

I was trying to think of a word that irked me other than "irk".

Then "facilitate" came to mind. In a recent PBS ad campaign about PBS in education, the interviewees were apparently given the direction to "use the word 'facilitate'" in their response to a question. It always came out stilted and awkward. One of these PSA spots was played so often that my wife and I cringed every time it came on.

We got our revenge. Our euphemism for letting the other know we need to step away to the restroom in, say, a restaurant, is "I need to facilitate."

Works for us!
 
I'd suggest we circle back and see if the working group has the bandwidth to lean in and drill down on this - they are the stakeholders after all and have the leverage. Best practice dictates we should touch base with the out-reach group too, because the synergy could move the needle off the scale. Lets put a pin in it for now, but shall we touch base once we've got out ducks in a row over this? I'll ping you.
 
Team members should bear in mind we're discussing a paradigm shift here. Work smarter and not harder, and we can push the envelope even further.

Ohgawd. These memories of corporate-speak from 40 years ago are turning my stomach. Ugh. Thanks a bunch.
 
Team members should bear in mind we're discussing a paradigm shift here. Work smarter and not harder, and we can push the envelope even further.

Ohgawd. These memories of corporate-speak from 40 years ago are turning my stomach. Ugh. Thanks a bunch.
Worst part? I understand what they're saying :(
 
Do you ever write complicated stories with lots of backstory that doesn't really make an impact on the action of the main story but helps add context and flavor? The LotR books provide a good example. If yes, do you ever find that it spontaneously seems to create an exciting new story seed/plot bunny that meshes wonderfully with the existing story, or else seems to perfectly align with or explain something you just wrote, but without having that backstory consciously in mind when you did it, making you feel extremely clever?
I call that moment a loregasm.
 
gotten
transgenderised
bigly
prius
pivot
no cap

You're right. "Gotten" is so, so clumsy. I've rewritten whole paragraphs when my mind falters into using it.

"Bigly"? I use that, though rarely, for the ridiculousness and illiteracy it conveys.

But "trangenderised". Where in the F did that come from? Ohgawd. Maybe I shouldn't know.
 
You're right. "Gotten" is so, so clumsy. I've rewritten whole paragraphs when my mind falters into using it.

"Bigly"? I use that, though rarely, for the ridiculousness and illiteracy it conveys.

But "trangenderised". Where in the F did that come from? Ohgawd. Maybe I shouldn't know.

Basically the practise of turning a noun into a verb... so... If you 'rocketise' something, or 'mountainize' so you end up mountainised. It gottens my goat.
 
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You need a transgenderising gun to shoot it someone and transgenderise them. Then they'll be transgendered.

Basically the practise of turning a noun into a verb.... so eg If you rocketise something, or mountainize so you end up mountainised. It gottens my goat.

I feel like you can make lots of new words: transgendering, transgenderation, transgenderlation, transgenderability
 
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