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D&D 5E Pedantic pet peeves


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For me, it's when I see people type "would of" or "could of" instead of "would've" or "could've". The former doesn't even make sense!

See, I thought we were talking gaming-specific peeves. If the topic is broader, then this would've been one of my first comments. I want to actually electrocute people who write "would of" or the like.
 



Broader stuff? Using "clip" for magazine

As a military veteran, this bugs me to no end as well.

As a Blackhawk crew chief, it’s not a chopper. A chopper is a motorcycle. It’s either a helicopter. Or bird. Or aircraft. Or it’s actual designation or name. But not a chopper.
 


But what if it bites you and it dies?

Sounds poinemous to me.

I’m sorry, but this bothers me every time I see it, and it’s been this way since I can remember: mixing up poisonous and venomous. If they are accurate, a poisonous snake can bite you all day long and you’ll never be poisoned. But D&D always mixes these up.

Like the saying goes, “if it bites you and you die, it’s venomous. If you bite it and you die, it’s poisonous.”

I hate when people mash words together like portmanteau is or ever was innately humorous.
 


As a military veteran, this bugs me to no end as well.

As a Blackhawk crew chief, it’s not a chopper. A chopper is a motorcycle. It’s either a helicopter. Or bird. Or aircraft. Or it’s actual designation or name. But not a chopper.

Thank you for your service!

However, the use of "chopper" as American military slang for helicopter was documented at least as early as the Korean War (between 1950-53, depending on which historian you read).

The last one I checked was:
Arne Olofsson
American Speech
Vol. 65, No. 3 (Autumn, 1990), pp. 278-284
Published by: Duke University Press
 

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