SLIGHTLY OFF THE
MARK
The Lake Superior State University
2013 list of banished words is up, and I’d be remiss if I didn’t talk about it.
(I’ve dedicated myself in this new
year to using one word every column that I don’t usually use, thus the
“remiss”. And the “thus”. Guess I’m ahead, now.)
I know what you’re thinking: Why is
it Lake Superior State University, coming up with this list? Well, have you
ever been to the area of Lake Superior in January? Believe me, there’s nothing
else to do unless you like skiing. It’s so cold that every year they get
reports of dozens of frostbitten snowmen. (The snowwomen are too smart to go
out in that.)
The first banned word I want to
mention is YOLO, which I discovered
two minutes ago stands for “You Only Live Once”. This is untrue. James Bond
proved that You Only Live Twice.
It seems people are using the
expression YOLO to do things that smarter people would not do, under the theory
that hey – you only live once, so might as well go for it! (I’m fairly sure “go
for it” has also been banned.) Well, they’ve got it backward. If you only live
once, then you might want to stop doing stupid things so you can live longer.
“Superfood”.
It’s what Superman eats. If you know
anything about Superman, you understand why he doesn’t eat greens, and also why
his friendship with Green Lantern and Green Arrow fizzled. On a related note,
I’ll bet the term “his kryptonite” has also been banned.
“Boneless
wings”.
I don’t have a clue why this term – it’s
a term, by the way, not a word – bothers people. I’m sure chickens don’t like
it.
“Guru”.
An expert at something should apparently
not be called a guru, unless he’s, for instance, teaching transcendental
meditation. Hey – I’m up three on my seldom used words!
“Trending”.
I believe this originally came from
Twitter, where if a certain hashtagged word becomes popular, it’s said to be
trending. They jumped the shark when “trending” trended. “Jump the shark?”
Yeah, gotta be banned.
“Bucket
List”.
What do you want on your bucket list
before you die? Apparently you want the end of the term bucket list. It comes
from the old expression “Kick the bucket”, as in “What’s on your bucket list to
do before you kick the bucket?”
“Well, I want to sell my bucket
collection.”
“Spoiler
alert”.
If you’re about to give away some big
secret, especially related to a TV show or movie, it’s considered polite to
give people spoiler alerts so they can stop reading, listening, watching, or
having Toddlers and Tiaras downloaded directly into their brains. (Spoiler
alert! The toddlers will grow up to need major therapy.)
Again, I’ve never been bothered by
that particular term, although I do get upset at myself because I often keep
reading, anyway. Still, it’s been used so often that it’s apparently jumped the
shark. As has “jump the shark”.
“Passion/passionate”.
It was great to say “tracking down Nazi
war criminals is my passion” (although that’s not such a popular pastime these
days). It was okay to say “Skydiving is my passion”, as it’s definitely off the
beaten track – an expression that’s been beaten to death. However people
started losing their – ahem – passion for the word when it became overused, as
in “Lunchmeat is my passion” or, for soap opera fans, “’Passion’ is my
passion”.
“Job
creators/creation”.
Job creators used to be people who
went out, worked their butts off starting or maintaining a business, and became
successful enough to hire people to work for them. Those people are now heaped in
with various not so savory characters under the phrase “The rich”, which should
probably be on this list, and the Federal government now claims to be a job
creator, even though if it was a business it would be in bankruptcy.
If that’s not reason enough to ban
the term, I don’t know what is.
“Double
Down”.
Apparently, in this context, it
means “repeat”, or “reaffirm”. Used too often in politics, it’s actually a
blackjack term … hm. Gambling and politics, maybe it does fit.
“Kick
the can down the road.”
I want to reiterate (four words
ahead!) that each individual word is not banned – just the phrase. I’m not sure
I could make it through the day without using the “the”.
The problem with this phrase is that
politicians on all sides accuse everyone else of kicking various cans down the
road, when in reality they’re all complicit in doing it. So we should kick
their cans.
Complicit? Five! I don’t have to use
any more big words until March.
“Fiscal
Cliff”.
Ah, my favorite. I used to use it to
refer to the entire problem of government overspending, but over the last few
months it came to refer to one specific deadline that Congress, striving hard
with only two year’s warning, staved off just hours after their final deadline.
Bully them!
The problem is that it’s not
properly descriptive. A cliff is generally something in nature, while the
Federal debt problem is manmade; therefore, the actual term should be maybe
“fiscal concrete wall”, although that doesn’t flow nearly as well.
On the other hand, fiscal cliff is
accurate in that instead of veering away from it, Congress left us dangling
over the side, hoping the rope won’t break and make us jump the fiscal sharks
below. And there’s a fiscal storm coming, so the rope will be getting fiscally
slippery.
Oh, that reminds me – I want to add a
term of my own to the banished words list:
“Weather
event”.
I’m not buying tickets to a snowstorm.
That term YOLO is something being used by a hip hop artist from Canada named Drake. He's trying to copyright it.
ReplyDeleteDid I mention Drake is a complete horse's ass?
Copyright it?! Sheesh.
Delete