Chris Coad
Chris Coad
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
That is indeed what I think. Calling a wine "hedonistic," is a futzed up (note the technical term) way of saying it is pleasurable, which is what we English speakers would say.
What about 'gift' and 'source' becoming verbs and all the other evolutions/mangled uses of parts of speech. It's a constantly moving target.
Seems like these threads always resort to pet peeves!
This is Mark Squires's defense of "varietal." In the long view you are right that usage will determine meaning. It's because the OED records usage that it is such a wonderful instrument. But usage occurs because people make choices. One of the choices they make is to follow a neologism or decide it is a solecism and razz it. Making certain nouns into verbs that essentially relate to the nouns and save ancillary phrases (gifting instead of giving a gift) provides a stylistic alternative and is sensical. Changing a philosophical term into a synonym for pleasurable seems to be just to add a false feeling of flash, just as referring to "varietal" no doubt sounds fancier to people when in fact it destroys a meaningful distinction.
One can no more accede to usage than one can stop its progress. All one can do is participate in its development. And one way is to complain when the reason seems right, just as it seems right to you to complain against the misuse of "gourmand" even though that misuse is widely spread enough so that some people here at first didn't even know you were complaining about it.
This kind of well reasoned argument is why I pay the subscription fees here.