What English expression do you hate the most?

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Drago

Legendary Member
Speaking of double negatives...

A local park has some new signs, the district junta council issuing orders.

The jist is that the signs instruct us thst we must not, and then a list of orders. One of those orders is DO (their emphasis in case we're thick) pick up dog poo.

So we must not do pick up our dog poo - I think that means we let the dog crap and leave it there.
 

Alex321

Guru
Location
South Wales
Oddly enough, while I'm not particularly bothered by the new expressions, idioms, Americanisms and the like in this thread, I do get a bit irritated by incorrect spelling. I don't mean American variant spelling - I'm OK with that. And I don't mean the odd slip with difficult words. I can acomodate that. I'm bothered where people use entirely the wrong word - loose for lose is top of the list, followed by past and passed. Oh yeah, its and it's too. Don't loose your way, go passed the house with a statue by it's gate. I don't hate it, but it does irk me a little.

Breaks instead of brakes is another common annoying one, particularly when seen in this forum. And peddles instead of pedals.
 

Rhythm Thief

Legendary Member
Location
Ross on Wye
Sentences beginning with "and" causes me great distress.

There's no good reason not to begin a sentence with "and", though. And that's all there is to it.
 

Conrad_K

unindicted co-conspirator
Breaks instead of brakes is another common annoying one, particularly when seen in this forum. And peddles instead of pedals.

And the near-reversal of the use of "to" and "too." And the increasing disappearance of the full stop at the end of a sentence And the random confusion of "discreet" and "discrete". And...
 

raleighnut

Legendary Member
And another one that is becoming increasingly ugly common.

Gotten.

Anyone using the term in the UK should be horse whipped, and I don't mean rhe enjoyable bondage dungeon by a dominatrix type of horse whipping.

“Gotten” is perfectly English, just somewhat archaic. The Pilgrims took it with them and, as puritans, resisted change. We, on the other hand, mangled it into “got” over time.
Ill gotton gains was commonly used to describe something (Cash or goods) made from nefarious activities
 
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