Road rules0 min ago
What Phrases Bandied About Really Annoy You?
113 Answers
I think the ones that i hear time and time again and mean diddley squat because they rarely ever do are:
"Lessons will be learned" and
"We have tightened procedures so this will never happen again"
I have heard these soundbites used in so many cock ups and cases of outright deception that i wouldn't beleive any instances even if it were true.
What ones really get up your goat???
"Lessons will be learned" and
"We have tightened procedures so this will never happen again"
I have heard these soundbites used in so many cock ups and cases of outright deception that i wouldn't beleive any instances even if it were true.
What ones really get up your goat???
Answers
My worst is 'Lessons will / have be / been learned ...' usually when a loss of life is involved. My other one is 'With respect ...' which you know heralds a sentence concerning anything but, and the more exaggerated it is - using with word 'greatest', that means complete contempt is about to flow your way. The other prefaces that mean the opposite are phrases like...
21:41 Sat 25th Jan 2014
My worst is 'Lessons will / have be / been learned ...' usually when a loss of life is involved.
My other one is 'With respect ...' which you know heralds a sentence concerning anything but, and the more exaggerated it is - using with word 'greatest', that means complete contempt is about to flow your way.
The other prefaces that mean the opposite are phrases like 'I'm not being funny but ...' Yes you are!, or 'I'm not racist but ...' - see previous.
In writing - and I have pointed it out on this site, the simple preface of 'So ...' often indicates that the following will be proof that the writer either didn't read what they are replying to, or if they did, they are deliberately, or out of ignorance, completely misunderstanding the sense of it.
My other one is 'With respect ...' which you know heralds a sentence concerning anything but, and the more exaggerated it is - using with word 'greatest', that means complete contempt is about to flow your way.
The other prefaces that mean the opposite are phrases like 'I'm not being funny but ...' Yes you are!, or 'I'm not racist but ...' - see previous.
In writing - and I have pointed it out on this site, the simple preface of 'So ...' often indicates that the following will be proof that the writer either didn't read what they are replying to, or if they did, they are deliberately, or out of ignorance, completely misunderstanding the sense of it.
-- answer removed --
"It is not acceptable". This makes me want to shout "Not acceptable to whom?". The statement is used by jobsworths for two reasons 1) it removes responsibility from them personally; it is couched in terms to avoid " It is not acceptable to me" and ascribes the judgment to something else 2) it avoids their being quizzed as to the reasons for the subject not being 'acceptable'
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