The "I Didn't Comment in Another Thread" Thread

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Although, to be fair, in Japan they do have contests about Kanji (the Chinese characters) routinely. Similar sort of thing.

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Wowsers, watching a 5 year old account with less than 2 dozen posts commit suicide by post is both impressive and sad. I just don't get it.

And, YUPPERS, made my saving throw to join into THAT conversation as well. Two for two this week. Dayum.

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And since we're talking about language, I've got one that bugs me more than pizza toppings. Where the hairy heck did "on accident" come from? It keeps cropping up in weird places and it's just so weird. When did we suddenly replace one two letter preposition with another two letter preposition? It's not like it even becomes easier to say. Just bloody weird.
 


And since we're talking about language, I've got one that bugs me more than pizza toppings. Where the hairy heck did "on accident" come from? It keeps cropping up in weird places and it's just so weird. When did we suddenly replace one two letter preposition with another two letter preposition? It's not like it even becomes easier to say. Just bloody weird.
It seems to be a regional thing. No one around here uses it but I've heard it, for example, in the American South.
 

And since we're talking about language, I've got one that bugs me more than pizza toppings. Where the hairy heck did "on accident" come from? It keeps cropping up in weird places and it's just so weird. When did we suddenly replace one two letter preposition with another two letter preposition? It's not like it even becomes easier to say. Just bloody weird.
Google suggests that it is people regularizing the opposites of "accident" and "purpose." Traditionally, we do things "on purpose" but they happen "by accident." But "on accident" sounds less weird than "by purpose" if you want them to use the same preposition for consistency.
 

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Google suggests that it is people regularizing the opposites of "accident" and "purpose." Traditionally, we do things "on purpose" but they happen "by accident." But "on accident" sounds less weird than "by purpose" if you want them to use the same preposition for consistency.

A prepositional consistency is the hobgoblin on small xvarts.
 
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It's a semantic conflation of "on purpose" and "by accident" among children in the American South. As we grow up, we learn to replace the implicit doubt with the phrase, "hold my beer."
Will Forte Fml GIF by The Lonely Island
 



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