I think I’m noticing a trend with English words:
@kasdeya I think this has to do with corporate sterilization of language. Like, people hear these words thrown around without much regard, often meaning the opposite of their definition because of how performance reviews are, and then the weight of the words lessens, I guess
@kasdeya reverse newspeak; it turns out it is more effective to reduce the range of expressible meanings than it is to reduce the range of words
@shlee @kasdeya "fully sick mate, subwoofer" i.e. not bad, good.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRv7IE6T4gQ
@kasdeya The overuse of superlatives means that there are no words left to describe things that are out of the ordinary.
@kasdeya looking forward to seeing quarterly reports featuring sigma, mid, and skibidi
ACAB
@kasdeya idk if they're all the same flavor of good good, there's levels to it. but yeah
Except for “shit”. It is still being used to express annoyance, anger, poor quality or surprise. Or, in some cases, a very inconpetent political leader.
@kasdeya Don't forget "great" (really large), "terrific" (causing terror), "amazing" (causing amazement), "wonderful"/"fabulous"/"marvelous" (causing wonder), etc. It's not a new phenomenon.
When a language tries to reimport words that have taken on other meanings within its own dialect information is lost.
"cool" doesn't mean "good" ... it mean unruffled, unflustered, calm and self-assured. These are good things to be, but it's not just "good"
"awesome" doesn't mean good, it means unexpected, different, unique, but in a way that deserves admiration.
I was recently complaining about how this kind of flattening has touched "throwing shade"