// Can somebody remind me what (sic) is used for in a sentence?//
it is Latin for 'so'
and it shortish for 'that is so' as in "did he really say that ?"
"yes that is so =yes he did "
Lawyers use it to ridicule each other and to high light typos and literals in their scripts. So if they get the date of an act wrong, you write "sic" after the quotation to show what dock heads they are - they dont even know when the act was passed ( and you do)
could of been used quite alot in the recent stateside presidential election
agree mushie
language changes - not according to the academics prescription
NJayz cont reminds me of someone on skis hanging onto a horses tail as it marches forward....
the horse represents the onward march of the English language
Dictionaries record use and not correct use and this accounts for finding 'wrong' meanings for words. Disinterested does NOT mean uninterested but fair or unbiased but the meaning of 'uninterested' is given as a second meaning in a dictionary.
I agree, Clover. I would never say, 'Can I get' when asking for something, just 'Can I have'. I would also never say, 'May I have' as it sounds far too precious today.
// I don't see any real difference between 'bored of' and 'tired of'/'sick of'.//
yeah I agree with the majority this time
bored means - tired of - or with a sense of ennui
fatigue ( fatty-gay - that one)
longing for another stimulus .....
Tilly, I think "bored with" gets confused with "tired of". And there's no actual reason why one should be "with" and the other "of", so I won't complain if they somehow merge; there's no obvious right or wrong there.
I can see a sort of logic at work in similar to/different from: similar things might move together and different things away from each other. (So" close to" but "apart from".)