eternumviti
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heads up peeps, it's 2023, language is evolving - it is was it is - chillax about it
Peeps.
Chillax.
Obvs...
heads up peeps, it's 2023, language is evolving - it is was it is - chillax about it
The instruction “enjoy” when a “waitperson” delivers food.
What winds me up is the seemingly now ubiqitous "everything ok with your food?" question which always seems to interrupt either a serious conversation or the ingestion of a mouthful of food.
Waiters who instruct you to 'Enjoy'.
The instruction “enjoy” when a “waitperson” delivers food.
AI robot voices are getting a lot better, some of them can almost fool you until they stumble on the odd word. The sorts of casual neologisms catalogued in this thread are amongst the things that will confuse the robot narrator.
Just sayin'.
Oh, 'just sayin''!
It's part of their training, although timing is at their discretion.
service type person
I do feel that some of these hated neologisms are just contractions, and have become accepted by common usage. So:
‘enjoy’ = ‘I/we hope you enjoy your food’; and
‘no problem’ = ‘I’m sure that won’t be a problem, sir’.
I don’t, er, have a problem with that.
That’s interesting, I can’t think that I’ve noticed that. And as I’ve deployed the expression once or twice myself, that was never the intent.I think "no problem" has an unspoken implication that the request is a bit of an imposition.
I’ve never been butled in my lifewhat's that then? your butler