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Some phrases that you are using incorrectly.

Posted: Wed May 27, 2015 2:29 pm
by Niraj Kumar
  • 1. Good vs. well

    These words are not interchangeable.
    Incorrect: He did good.
    Correct: He did well.

    Incorrect: She sings good.
    Correct: She sings well.

    Incorrect: She speaks English good.
    Correct: She speaks good English.
    Correct: She speaks English well.

    Good is an adjective. It goes before a noun. An adjective cannot be used to modify an adverb. Well is an adverb. It usually goes after the verb or verb + object.

    2. Extract revenge vs. Exact revenge

    The correct phrase is ‘exact revenge’. To extract something is to take it out of something else.
    They extracted juice from the mangoes.

    3. Leadway vs. Leeway

    There is no such word as ‘leadway’. Leeway means extra space or freedom. To give somebody leeway is to give them the extra space they need.

    4. Expresso vs. Espresso

    Have you ever walked into a coffee shop and ordered an expresso? Well, there is no such drink. You were trying to order an espresso but ended up saying ‘expresso’.

    5. Irregardless vs. Regardless

    The word ‘regardless’ itself means ‘without regard’. There is no need to add the prefix ‘ir’. The word ‘irregardless’ seems like a double negative. It doesn’t make any sense.

    6. Conversating vs. Conversing

    To converse is to engage in conversation.
    She was preoccupied with her own thoughts and didn’t converse with him.
    Conversating is not a word, although many people use it in place of the correct term, conversing.

    7. Scotch free and Scott free vs. Scot free

    The correct expression is scot-free. Scot-free means ‘without suffering any punishment or injury’. It is an adverb.
    The people who kidnapped the child will not go scot-free.

    8. 360 degree change vs. 180 degree change

    You have probably heard people saying that they have made a complete 360 degree change in their life. Well, if they have made a 360 degree change, then they haven’t changed at all. When you go 360 degrees you return to the exact same place where you used to be. To imply that you have completely changed your life, you have to use the expression ‘a 180 degree change’.
source: This is taken from an internal intranet in my company where they mentioned the source as google.

Re: Some phrases that you are using incorrectly.

Posted: Wed May 27, 2015 3:28 pm
by William Collins
The spelling of that small strong cup of black coffee can vary between countries. It is pedantic bigotry (by the original source), which shows a very narrow mind, to attempt to insist otherwise. Use the correct word or words (there are many where I live, including expresso) for the country you are living in and don't ever exhibit your own parochialism when talking about coffee by attempting to dictate to others when you know so little.

Niraj Kumar, this is not directed at you :-)

Re: Some phrases that you are using incorrectly.

Posted: Wed May 27, 2015 4:54 pm
by zprogrammer
Also
Prepone vs Advance

Re: Some phrases that you are using incorrectly.

Posted: Wed May 27, 2015 10:21 pm
by Niraj Kumar
Thanks for sparing me William...:)

Re: Some phrases that you are using incorrectly.

Posted: Thu Sep 03, 2015 3:04 pm
by Rajesh Reddy
ANd the famous in Indian email, after a long email - "Please do the needful".

Re: Some phrases that you are using incorrectly.

Posted: Thu Sep 03, 2015 4:37 pm
by enrico-sorichetti
and what about ... solutioning a problem :mrgreen: