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Cake day: July 22nd, 2023

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  • I think I disagree with a lot of the comments here. The “trying to sound smart” feeling only really occurs when there’s a mismatch in decorum – someone is trying to appear Higher and More Logical – but that can happen with any word, especially adverbs.

    Technically, your argument is fallacious.

    “Technically” is a useless crutch word (techy!), and “fallacious” is hella overused outside of formal logic stuff, so here it’s a mismatch in decorum. (What’s the fallacy? Does the other just… disagree with you, or are you using a converse error like A implies B, therefore B implies A?)

    Well, you don’t always have to do that, per se, but you can irregardless.

    A lot of crutch words are just innocent habits, too. masterspace@lemmy.ca mentioned something like that… though there are always people who up their jargon levels for no reason other than To Be More L33t. and_screw_irregardless

    On the other hand, some words commented here are needed. For example, if a reviewer calls Grossman’s The Magicians “erudite”, it fits perfectly – the book

    Tap for spoiler

    uses a metaphor for an archetypal Harvard. In one word we sum up the cloistered, elite, difficult, rich, status-chasing-ness combined with sophistication the metaphor entails.

    Continuing on that feeling of summed-up-in-one-word-ness – what alternatives do we really have for “whataboutism” or the “algorithm” or “milquetoast”? Those words hit hard, they sum things up.

    The algorithm is an alt-right pipeline, of course he’ll have that phase.

    Great, another video on the most milquetoast youtuber drama I’ve ever heard.

    Those words are concise, they roll off the tongue and evoke feeling! Don’t shorten words just to sound more colloquial when you have a choice that really fits! And likewise, equally – don’t be grandiloquent just for the sake of it.

    Or else you’ll face floccinaucinihilipilification :3