Blossomed, when referring to a person [...]
"She's blossomed into a lovely young woman."
The Daily Mail wants to know your location.Blossomed, when referring to a person, particularly a teenager.
As one person who messaged a radio station put it, about her 13 year old daughter:
"She's blossomed into a lovely young woman."
No. Stop. It's not cute, and it goes beyond cringe worthy; it's creepy.
Blossomed should only be used to refer to plants.
Most things that drip actually leak."Drip" when describing someone's outfit or just fashion in general. It just sounds stupid to me and makes no sense.
More of a thing in movies than in everyday speech, but I hate when this gets shortened to 'rook'. Ugh.Rookie
Always hated it.
Cold and Coldest.
Congratulations, you have managed to ruin the word and metaphor of "Cool" meaning good. I utterly hate seeing things that are "good" described as being Cold. How can polar opposites in Hot and Cold both mean good?
At least with "Hot" and "Cool", it's easy to emphasise the word in a way that can make it sound the way you want, but Cold just has too many negative connotations and such a hard sound to end the word that there's no way of even making it sound good.
I’ve never heard that. Thankfully.Cold and Coldest.
Congratulations, you have managed to ruin the word and metaphor of "Cool" meaning good. I utterly hate seeing things that are "good" described as being Cold. How can polar opposites in Hot and Cold both mean good?
At least with "Hot" and "Cool", it's easy to emphasise the word in a way that can make it sound the way you want, but Cold just has too many negative connotations and such a hard sound to end the word that there's no way of even making it sound good.
Spoiler because I'm just choosing videos which appeared in a search, so no NSFW check has been done.I’ve never heard that. Thankfully.
Who and where are these kind of expressions coming from?
"Burglarization" is my favourite.Utilize, instead of simply use!
Content creator is just a dumb name in general because the word "content" describes literally anything. A video game producer is producing content, a literary critic is producing content, a financial analyst creating a report is producing content."Content Creator"
I get it, especially when you do Twitch, Youtube and other sort of platforms and want to bunch it under one name.
However, there is a side of me that thinks this a term made for the insecure who think "Youtuber" means they won't be taken seriously. Like how people would describe kid shows as "family shows", or comic books as "graphic novels".
Just like anyone who ever appeared in any bit role in a movie or TV show is a "star".The term celebrity falls into the category of words I hate because celebrity seems to be attached to anyone that’s had media spotlight or some press.
It’s in the word, for Pete’s sake, “celebrate”. Nobody on Celebrity Love Brother, or whatever the reality TV is these days, is remotely celebrated.
Real celebrities are those at the top of their game; musicians, actors and actresses, athletes, those that are household names internationally.
It's apparently being pushed as one but the idea of "survivorship" bias is wrong. It's survival bias.Wait, survivorship is a word?