Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I know I've referred to it before. I know it's petty. BUT, it's pissing me off so it deserves a whole thread of its own.


Yesterday on "NCIS" (Ducky you should know better).


Tonight on "Monroe".


Too many times in recent months, so now I shall log the mismentions (new word: I like it) on here.


Together we can change the world.

Peckhamgatecrasher Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Jacks09, it should be pronounced 'diss' as in "dis

> me and I'll shiv you."

>

> 'sect' as in "Christadelphians are a dubious

> sect".



I do love a phonetically driven syllabic bisection.

I too am from the past and proud of it.


I was brought up to say diss-ect as in dis-respect. But I've noticed that some people - particularly medics - say dye-SECT. And they pronounce cervical "cerv-EYE-cal" instead of "SER-vical".


My own bugbear is people who say 'har-ASS-ment' instead of 'HAR-assment'.

dulwichgirl2 Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Where do we stand on, "I was sat in the cafe when

> xyz happened"?

> It is starting to gain traction....


If you are talking about the actions of, for example, the waiter who assisted you when xyz suddenly occurred, then fine; otherwise you need to be horse-whipped.*


*Unless you are a citizen of the USA in which case it is attractively endearing and carries an air of the devil-may-care one has come to love about you.

Peckhamgatecrasher Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I know I've referred to it before. I know it's

> petty. BUT, it's pissing me off so it deserves a

> whole thread of its own.

>

> Yesterday on "NCIS" (Ducky you should know

> better).

>

> Tonight on "Monroe".

>

> Too many times in recent months, so now I shall

> log the mismentions (new word: I like it) on

> here.

>

> Together we can change the world.


Ducky is parroting a script written in the United States, so he says dyesect, as do most people over there.


Same with skedjule. A US of A way to say it. You would be dysecting too many people to count and might feature on your own episode of NCIS were you to join the military in some form or other.

Urban Dictionary:


A shiv is a weapon made out of an commonplace object often in prison, also perhaps the origin of which is as a acronym a Self Honed Implement of Violence (SHIV).


Also used as a verb 'to shiv' as in my example.


Could also use a shiv to dissect someone (see what I did?)

From Urban Dictionary:

SHIV

1) Slang for a knife or any other small cutting/stabbing weapon, often homemade; think inmates with sharpened toothbrushes.

2) The act of utilising the aforementioned small cutting/stabbing weapon to cut/stab someone.

???? Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Ditto "look" before a statement by every fooking

> politician since Obama started it. Not

> pronounciation, just dull unimaginativr ubiquity.


Tony Blair mastered that one. It's supposedly a rhetorical device to get most people's attention as we tend to think 'visually'. Other speakers begin statements with "Listen,..." but apparently that's much less effective.


Jack Straw had (and probably still has) an annoying way of prefacing everything he says with "Well,...", which not only makes his interviewer sound stupid, but also he speaks it without a full 'L' sound. So it's something like "Wew". Really bloody irritating.


And don't get me started on young Miliband's glo'al stops...


edt for sp.

Looo tenant. I find myself saying that even though I know none. I never understood how one could get Leff from Lieu. And since American films are or were the prevalent cultural source for many of us, we stick to skedules for Lootenants.


I agree about the misuse of "Hopefully", and I do try and say "I hope that.." instead. But people who end their sentences with so... Grrrrrr



So...

PeckhamRose Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> But people

> who end their sentences with so... Grrrrrr

>

>

> So...


I take it you are differentiating between 'so' and 'so...' (or the even more irritating 'so-o...' with a musical inflection).


In some parts of Ireland the former is an indispensibe way of communicating when one has reached the end of a sentence.


Jayz have ye never been to Cork so?

Like, no. So....

And don't call me Jay z. (!)


Back to the OP. I think the first time I heard the word dissect was at school when we were told to DYE sect a mouse. I refused. And not because I was waiting for the teacher to say DISS sect, but because I thought it was a wrong thing to do. But as the teacher had said DYE sect, it would not have occurred to me that she had mispronounced it! I have never heard anyone say DISSect, but since I respect PGC I shall consider using that pronunciation from now on. So...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Labour have changed a number of things overnight.   1. VAT on school fees - this has resulted in 25,000 moving until state education. 2. Increasing NICs adding billions to the cost of going to work. 3. Introducing the Employment Rights Bill causing employers to stop hiring. This and item 2 have added 100,000 people to the unemployment scrapheap. These are also causing businesses to relocate further harming the economy. 4. Scrapping all the small boats deterrents meaning 60,000 illegal migrants have arrived in small boats since they were elected. 5. Dishing out huge public sector payroses with no conditions so we have a massively increased payroll and doctors etc arestill going out on strike. 6.changed IHT and non domicile tax rules causing 16,500 millionaires to leave the UK and stop paying any tax here at all forever. 7. Alongside 6, leaving the budget up until an historically late period after the last budget has caused a house price crash, killing the market and decimating government stamp duty receipts. 8. Their profligate borrowing (£100bn extra in just one year) to fund all their lavish promises means the government can now only borrow at the highest ever yields on records. They are more beholden to the bond markets than Liz Truss was. 9. The rate of inflation has doubled under this government. It was a healthy 2% when they came in. For most of the last year, as a result of all of the above it is now nearly 4%.   These are all decisions the Labour government took that have immediate cause and effect.  Its no good harking back to 15 years ago. The current administration was gifted the fastest growing economy in the G7 and within 15 months they have destroyed it.    And things are only going to get worse this winter.      
    • I use Autocar Repair in West Dulwich.. been using them for over 20 years. Excellent service… 
    • A lot to agree with here - don’t get me started on Irish people complaining about immigration! - but that final paragraph is once again a cop out  there’s a lot of extreme right wing money stirring up the division that people are feeling - but there is zero excuse for handing power to these people. We live in a democracy and if we have enough people willing to give it up then judging those people foolish enough to do so is not only something that will happen, it is something that the rest of us should be morally compelled to do  if someone wouldn’t “normally” vote for a racist party yet somehow will do so because they hear someone like me saying that would be bad, then you better believe I’m judging them
    • We can't use our kitchen for a while and so looking for an air fryer to plug the gap. Please let me know if you have a good one in working order.  07702 305 310 Thanks
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...