Why do people keep adding this to their comments? Are they checking notes? Why do they feel the need to point it out if they are? Why are they saying they are if they aren’t? It’s like me adding “scratching head” to my comment, which I just did, but I have no idea why that adds anything to the conversation.

  • @[email protected]
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    4814 days ago

    It’s just a fad. Speech mannerisms also come and go with the times. Right now it’s popular to use it, and people use it.

    • @[email protected]
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      1614 days ago

      It do be like that. Many of them get repeated till they reach a critical point and everyone is sick of them. Some of them are harder to tolerate than others though. I can deal with people ‘checking notes’ here and there but those who use “literally” as every second word in their sentences awaken a primal rage inside of me that is yearning for rock to split skull. Luckily that trend isn’t as prevalent as it used to be back in the day.

      • @[email protected]
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        214 days ago

        there but those who use “literally” as every second word in their sentences awaken a primal rage inside of me that is yearning for rock to split skull.

        I hard agree. Misuse of literal is a problem many decades old and it hurts still

      • @[email protected]
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        214 days ago

        OK but the dictionary literally modified the definition to I clude “figuratively” because language is alive and unwell

        • @[email protected]
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          113 days ago

          That “modern” definition of literally is at least 250 years old. It wasn’t created by the internet, or even any living person.

    • Miles O'Brien
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      614 days ago

      And with all fads, it’s cyclical. But on the internet, things move quicker so instead of 20-30 years, it’s more like 5-10.