Overuse of the word like.....

Soldato
Joined
18 Oct 2002
Posts
9,262
This has annoyed me for a while and I really do pick up on it. The worst are conversations which explain a conversation:

"So I was like...."
"They were like...."
"I was like...."

It seems as if it's particularly common with younger people but I have also noticed some intelligent and well educated people using the word in situations where it makes absolutely no sense. It seems as if it's become a fashionable filler word.

Does this annoy anyone else or am I alone? :confused: Hopefully it won't be one of those irritations that you notice more after reading this thread ;)
 
seems like we hasve gone back in time around 10 years then if everyone is like yea like but like oh like yes i do like
 
To be honest, I hate overuse of any particular words or phrases when people are talking. Constantly "I was, like, doing this thing, like, and then like this other thing happened and I was like, OMG", or the above mentioned "basically".

Also "know what I mean?" and "yeah?", eg. "I went down to the shop, yeah(?), and, like, there was this big sign for like 15% off, yeah(?), but it actually cost more than I could get it from here. So I thought, that was crap... dyaknowwadimean?"

*GRINDS TEETH*
 
I dislike it when I use the words 'basically' or 'like' when constructing the rest of a sentence.

As said, it's a 'filler' whilst thinking but a habit I'm trying to remove :)
 
Personally I find it strange anyone would care how someone speaks unless they couldn't understand it.

You clearly all think you speak perfect English, but if we took you back to Shakespeare's era you would be mightily out of place.
 
One i hate is "I Swear Down" :confused: + :mad: Instant RAGE :D

What does it mean in context? I can't rage against it properly if I don't know what it means...

Personally I find it strange anyone would care how someone speaks unless they couldn't understand it.

You clearly all think you speak perfect English, but if we took you back to Shakespeare's era you would be mightily out of place.

Maybe everyone who has posted does speak perfect English but I don't get the impression that's the point that's being made. When you notice someone overusing a phrase or an action then it can become all you notice about the message the person is trying to communicate - I've had lecturers where I've simply been counting the time between certain phrases being repeated rather than paying attention to what they're saying because they used them so frequently.
 
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