Ian Fitzsimmons
Ian Fitzsimmons
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
As I have said, the difference is not between correctness and usage because usage just is what it is and will always win out. It's between changes that impoverish and those that enrich (in my infallible judgement, of course). The shift you mark in bully pulpit actually seems to me a good one since it creates a meaningful metaphor where before there was just slack slang. I prefer under weigh (the original formulation) to under way because the former's metaphor is not yet as dead as a door nail, but both formulations at least attach to some referential meaning. I don't even see why one would use "begs the question" instead of "raises the question," although I guess people think it means "begs for us to ask the question" or something like that.
I am with Jayson in not even being able to guess what people who write doggy dog world have in mind. But I assure him, the formulation is a common student error and just ready to become usage.
I guess I have a second thing coming.
Does doggy-dog mean something? In common parlance?