"I could care less" and more goofs
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- Shelle
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Re: "I could care less" and more goofs
Using the (non)word 'irregardless' is one of my biggest pet peeves. I actually quit dating a guy in college who said irregardless ALL THE TIME. I just couldn't take it and decided the best solution was to not be around him anymorebookowlie wrote:Good thread!
Here are the ones that annoy me -
Irregardless when it should be Regardless
Statue of limitations when it should be Statute of limitations (this error drives me up a wall)
-- 22 Apr 2016, 01:33 --
One more -
Piece of mind which should be peace of mind

Now my husband will sometimes say it to be funny. I can't win!
-Garrison Keillor
- bookowlie
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"I gave him a peace of my mind" (figure of speech for telling someone off) which should be "I gave him a piece of my mind"
The above phrase uses the other "piece," as opposed to the "peace of mind" example.
How about "I gave him a piece of my mind, he walked out and there was peace"

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I see this on our local Facebook groups all the time too. It is really annoying!lizzurppp wrote:One thing I've noticed a lot, particularly on Facebook, is that people either don't understand or don't care about the different between "sale" and "sell." For example, a woman selling some furniture will say, "Rocking chair for sell, $20." See the problem here? Maybe because I live in the south and it's pronounced differently, the woman chose the incorrect conjugation of the verb, but it's very frustrating. Ma'am, your rocking chair is for SALE, not for sell.
-Garrison Keillor
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-- 11 May 2016, 10:10 --
I actually heard a lawyer say that once. I cringed.aspann09 wrote:Irregardless is another one, but it's understandable that people can make these mistakes. English can be hard.
-- 11 May 2016, 10:12 --
"Deep-seeded" is one I actually thought was correct for a while. In my defense, I'm still learning many idioms because my mother wasn't a native speaker so we didn't use many English ones.moderntimes wrote:I just saw another one: "waiting with baited breath" which is incorrect. It should be "bated" and that's a very common error.
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"She was wearing high hills." Guess the incline of hills does resemble that of some women's shoes.
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NO!! "Should have..."
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