An early phrase that I loathe is "can I get" but a more recent one is the word curate which is used in place of collect, or select etc. Recent examples:
The Guardian" the BBC's failure to curate some news event responsibly"
A description of someone's collection of china pig money boxes (once given away free) as being "carefully curated"
A delicatessen which provides "a perfectly curated picnic"
To my mind the misuse of the word devalues the work of museum and gallery curators.
I genuinely don't mind Rainbow Bridge - I know the idea brings a lot of comfort to those of us who have lost beloved pets. I'm not religious and don't believe in a heaven, but if there was one, I'd want it to be full of animals rather than people!
Just thought of another phrase that really winds me up when something really bad happens on the news and the “ body” involved says lessons will be learnt .
Masses of the above. I don’t get the objection to ‘bairns’ though - surely a good old Scots word? The Swedish word for ‘child’ is very similar to ‘bairn’ so presumably it came with the Vikings.
REEsearch instead of reSEARCH makes me cringe.
Ditto ‘I’m good’ in reply to ‘ How are you?’ or ‘Would you like...?’
The generic "Thank You Driver" shouted at the end of a bus journey. Dont get me wrong of course we should thank people but this just sounds so insincere.
Yes, when did that start? I don't remember it happening when I was a child, and on the whole they were probably more polite times, but now it would seem rude to get off the bus without a 'thank you'.
crazy H I'm old enough to remember that 'lurgy' should be 'The Dreaded Lurgy' an expression used in The Goon Show. Spike Milligan frequently had The Dreaded Lurgy.
Hubby, overly, majorly, guys, basically, bubba, bubs, anything prefaced by "Gob" (foul word!), a brew, If that makes sense, babe, Hun, for free (It is "free"), like, sick to my stomach - you would not be sick to your elbow would you?
I can't stand the term, when referring to grandparents. I don't mind its use when referring to children/teenagers, but it all seems rather derogatory when referring to grandparents. It's not a term I ever really came across until I came on GN, so I don't think it's a particularly British thing, is it? Thankfully, my 'boundaries' have not needed setting!