What is some of your Pet Peeve's

   / What is some of your Pet Peeve's #2,992  
Sorry... no. I understand the whole notion that "English is a living language", and that the various dictionaries are always adding slang and new words. I disagree with it, but I understand it.

However, "irregardless" presents a unique challenge, that makes it technically mean the exact opposite of what people intend, when saying it.

"Regardless" means "without regard". But adding the prefix "ir" to any word means "the opposite of", such that "irregardless" would mean "without lack of regard", or simply "with regard to".

So how can one add it to the dictionary, with a definition that is exactly the opposite of what the word quite literally describes?
I agree about the word irregardless.

To me it is the like saying you unthawed the meat. Does that mean you froze the meat?
 
   / What is some of your Pet Peeve's #2,993  
For me it’s that you can’t buy a new truck that lasts, or that you can work on.

And good luck trying to find a long bed regular cab.
 
   / What is some of your Pet Peeve's #2,994  
Double negatives:

Google AI Overview

The double negative has a rich linguistic history, evolving from a standard, emphatic feature in Old and Middle English (Chaucer, Shakespeare used it) to being stigmatized in formal Modern English due to prescriptive grammarians in the 1700s, yet it persists in many dialects (like AAVE, Southern English) and languages worldwide...


Bruce
 
   / What is some of your Pet Peeve's #2,996  
I agree about the word irregardless.

To me it is the like saying you unthawed the meat. Does that mean you froze the meat?
You can disagree all that you want. Yet it's still been considered a word for longer than most of us have been around.
 
   / What is some of your Pet Peeve's #2,997  
Double negatives:

Google AI Overview

The double negative has a rich linguistic history, evolving from a standard, emphatic feature in Old and Middle English (Chaucer, Shakespeare used it) to being stigmatized in formal Modern English due to prescriptive grammarians in the 1700s, yet it persists in many dialects (like AAVE, Southern English) and languages worldwide...


Bruce
A famous one is;
I can't get no satisfaction.
 
   / What is some of your Pet Peeve's #2,998  
Double negatives:

Google AI Overview

The double negative has a rich linguistic history, evolving from a standard, emphatic feature in Old and Middle English (Chaucer, Shakespeare used it) to being stigmatized in formal Modern English due to prescriptive grammarians in the 1700s, yet it persists in many dialects (like AAVE, Southern English) and languages worldwide...


Bruce
Double negatives are fine, when meant to state the positive. "I wouldn't be unhappy, if she offered me a BJ." That's a double negative, but all good and true.

Even irregardless would be fine in conversation, if it were used to mean "regarding", rather than "regardless".

Of course, the most famous improper double-negative of all time... "we don't need no education." :p
 

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