Date: Fri, 2 Jan 1998 13:56:56 EST
From: AAllan AAllan[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]AOL.COM
Subject: Legible Superior anti-list
Sorry for the clutter in the previous posting of this story! I'll try again:
-----------
Word police think the linguistic value of 'yadda, yadda, yadda' is zip, zero,
nada
Reuters News Service
SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. -- The word police at Lake Superior State University
nominated a New Year's list of slang words and cliches they want banned
Wednesday, issuing a plea that speakers avoid the annoying "yadda, yadda,
yadda."
Other words and phrases failing the school's standard for proper English usage
were the abbreviated greeting "whassup?" or the even shorter " 'sup?", the
confessional "my bad" and the insulting "talk to the hand" (not to my face).
Since 1976, the university's public relations staff has solicited nominations
for its New Year's list of cliches, slang words or redundancies that crop up
in current usage and deserve banishment.
Instead of "whassup?" the school suggested people just try saying hello.
"It's passe," said nominator Greg Arceri of Northville, Mich., of the
greeting.
Many found the oft-repeated phrase "my bad" to be an infantile alternative to
admitting a mistake, and others opined that "yadda, yadda, yadda" was merely
an irritating substitute for "and so on."
The overused "Generation X" came in for criticism -- possibly from those in
the 20-something age group -- for being a bland moniker deserving a
replacement, although no suitable one was offered.
Some favored words and prefixes used by the media were also excoriated. The
superlative "ever" as in "the best film adaptation of a John Grisham novel
ever!" was viewed as an unneeded superlative that is redundant.
The prefix "re-" was so overused that one contributor to the list suggested
"we should re-double our efforts to re-think this issue" before reusing it.
In addition, the school suggested that athletes who insist on giving "110
percent" should be held to it, and anyone who announces plans to "take it to
the next level" ought to be held back.
The phrase "show me the money," popularized by the football player played by
Cuba Gooding Jr. in the movie Jerry McGuire, was seen as funny once -- but no
more.
And casino operators ought to be instructed to quit calling their sport
"gaming" when everyone knows it's a euphemism for gambling, gambling,
gambling.
Yadda, yadda, yadda.