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Amazing! Fabulous! Awesome!

MikeBravo

One Too Many
Messages
1,301
Location
Melbourne, Australia
Please stop. I'm turning green and nauseous just thinking about it...

"Snazzy", I use pretty often.

"Bully" I also tend to use (as in "bully for you" - 'Good for you').

Another older expression I use tends to be 'book' as well. As in "make book" ("To be/make certain/sure of something").

No way! Talking like that is a real gasser.
 

Grizzly Adams

A-List Customer
Messages
364
Location
New Mexico
Pray tell, what words would you suggest to expand the populations ability to express themselves?
Great, fantastic, wonderful for starters......:)

"Amazing" should be reserved for things that truly are - like the birth of your first born, or finding your self still alive when you shouldn't be.....or the sunset from the top of a Colorado Mountain.;)
 

Pompidou

One Too Many
Messages
1,242
Location
Plainfield, CT
Once weakened, a word can never be made powerful again. It'd be more fruitful to try and coin a brand new word. While we're trying to coin the next synonym for awesome, it might be handy to come up with a swear or two that you can't actually say in polite company. All our current ones don't raise eyebrows anymore. Why, I can't think of a single word that'd offend me.
 

MikeBravo

One Too Many
Messages
1,301
Location
Melbourne, Australia
Once weakened, a word can never be made powerful again. It'd be more fruitful to try and coin a brand new word. While we're trying to coin the next synonym for awesome, it might be handy to come up with a swear or two that you can't actually say in polite company. All our current ones don't raise eyebrows anymore. Why, I can't think of a single word that'd offend me.

That is up to the next generation. Awesome is just the modern equivalent of groovy, far out, neat, gasser, hip, hep, ripper etc. used by previous generations. Soon "awesome" will be considered old-fashioned and quaint

Only time will tell which word it will be
 

rocketeer

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,605
Location
England
More of my pet hates:-
Uni for University, why not call it University? Its an honor to get there isnt it? So use the full term.
LA, Los Angeles is a beautiful name so why demean it to to letters? We very rarely hear the city termed Los Angeles now. We dont say NY pronounced en why, do we, nor C I for Coney Island or S F though you do say Frisco. Here we will not say SoS for Southend on Sea nor WSM for Weston Super Mare.
Cheap as Chips(very annoying)
Sorted(for getting something done)
 

bunnyb.gal

Practically Family
Messages
788
Location
sunny London
Biccies, choccies, hols...

*yucky*

But what really makes me ill are the media-created truncations and amalgamations of people's names like: SuBo, Kate and "Wills", Jedward, Madge. Besides the fact that most of these "celebrities" are actually "celebrities" for pretty spurious reasons, are we so lazy that we can't even say "Susan Boyle"?
 

rue

Messages
13,319
Location
California native living in Arizona.
Biccies, choccies, hols...

*yucky*

But what really makes me ill are the media-created truncations and amalgamations of people's names like: SuBo, Kate and "Wills", Jedward, Madge. Besides the fact that most of these "celebrities" are actually "celebrities" for pretty spurious reasons, are we so lazy that we can't even say "Susan Boyle"?

The combinations are worse.... Bradgelina :rolleyes:
 

Peregrine

New in Town
Messages
47
Location
West Sussex, UK
The combinations are worse.... Bradgelina :rolleyes:

Over here we have a coalition government between the Conservatives (led by David Cameron) and the Liberal Democrats (led by Nick Clegg). A combination of those two worthy gentlemen's first names is often used to describe what a large number of people think of them...
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,840
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
It's interesting to compare modern gossip-column slang with that of the man who *originated* the gossip column, Walter Winchell: one of the most ingenious newspapermen ever to sit at a typewriter, the man who gave us "middleaisled" for married, "infanticipating" for pregnant, and "Reno-vated" for divorced among hundreds of other genuinely clever word manipulations. But he would never have stooped to referring to, say, Carole Lombard and Clark Gable as "Gombard."
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,126
Location
Nebraska
I can't *stand* "awesome!" when used by anyone over the age of fifteen. "Fabulous" to me implies something like a line of fifty chorus girls doing a high-kick on top of a fifty-foot high revolving neon wedding cake, not a middle-aged woman going down to buy a carton of Kools in leopard-skin yoga pants. And "Amazing" brings to mind the image of a second-rate stage magician with a clip-on moustache and a cardboard top hat.

There were overused superlatives in the Era -- people used to snicker at movie trailers that promised that every upcoming production was SPECTACULAR -- COLOSSAL -- STUPENDOUS, and if they used such terms in their own conversation they were being sarcastic. But I don't get the sense that when people use Fabumazinawsome today, they're being in any way sarcastic -- they're the only words they seem to know. Except for Cool. And Dood.

Lizzie, you have once again proved, by your excellent writing skills, why you need to write a book.
 

Gin&Tonics

Practically Family
Messages
899
Location
The outer frontier
I'm rather partial to "magnificent", "splendid", and "superlative" myself. Occaisionally I break out randomly saying "MAJESTTYYYYYYYY" in an overly dramtic, high pitched sing song voice. Yes, I am profoundly strange; I've simply come to accept it, and you should too.
 

Stanley Doble

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,808
Location
Cobourg
Biccies, choccies, hols...

*yucky*

But what really makes me ill are the media-created truncations and amalgamations of people's names like: SuBo, Kate and "Wills", Jedward, Madge. Besides the fact that most of these "celebrities" are actually "celebrities" for pretty spurious reasons, are we so lazy that we can't even say "Susan Boyle"?

Sports writers used to be notorious for coining lame nicknames like "the ambling alp" "the sultan of the swat" etc but even they never sank that low.

By the way I got a huge laugh out of a supermarket tabloid headline the other day " Brad Pitt's secret life inside" ya right like that guy has any secrets. If he scratches his butt while standing in line at the supermarket you will see the photos on the front page next week.
 

bunnyb.gal

Practically Family
Messages
788
Location
sunny London
Over here we have a coalition government between the Conservatives (led by David Cameron) and the Liberal Democrats (led by Nick Clegg). A combination of those two worthy gentlemen's first names is often used to describe what a large number of people think of them...

You mean the LibDems, don't you...;)
 

randooch

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,869
Location
Ukiah, California
Over here we have a coalition government between the Conservatives (led by David Cameron) and the Liberal Democrats (led by Nick Clegg). A combination of those two worthy gentlemen's first names is often used to describe what a large number of people think of them...

Davick?
 

Espee

Practically Family
Messages
548
Location
southern California
I keep finding young waiters and waitresses who have only one way of addressing a party of diners-- "you guys."
My 86-year-old mother has never wanted to be one of the guys.
 

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