“Great report Jim, but does it pass the litmus test?” Good grief, do they still do litmus tests?
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
mansplain.
SPP
"Our design and engineering team will take a WHOLISTIC APPROACH in addressing your project."
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Answering any question with the first word being "so."
Jay Dwight
Passionate.
I'll probably say something I'll regret, so I won't say anything.
Chikashi Miyamoto
more shots in arms
The new definition of the word endorse, as often seen in the medical world.
“He endorsed having a bad headache for days”.
It’s worse than fingernails on a chalkboard.
Did someone say the world granular?
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Consultant - like right now on call "special sauce"
*title of my sex tape
Sometimes while waiting on the phone for HelpDesk I wonder who's job it is to do this critical blue sky thinking, conceptualising new buzzwords then socialising them to see whether they will fly across a wide audience with minlmum pushback.
Last edited by osbk67; 02-19-2021 at 03:13 PM. Reason: Rejig to optimise clarity and buy-in
A coworker and I did an experiment a few years ago where we started using a word in a new, esoteric way to see if our boss would start using it too. Sure enough, she did. The white collar work world is so ridiculous sometimes. I purposely avoid using as much office jargon as possible, because it's so easy-- just replace the ridiculous phrase with a more common one that means the same thing. Don't be a linguistic lemming.
The word player. As in, he’s not a player. I heard that said about someone as a criticism and asked “so what does that mean - he has sex with a lot of people at work or he doesn’t charge for sex or...help me out here. What are you really trying to say?”
Wifey and Hubby. Just sounds like something out of the 1980’s swinging scene. Please I don’t even want the unintended innuendo. I guess those aren’t really buzzwords. And probably just my pet peeve too.
Last edited by j44ke; 02-19-2021 at 11:22 PM.
Let me be perfectly clear.
It's time to close this thread.
People saying legitimately when they mean literally.
These two words may have already been mentioned in this discussion: unpack, optics. I sat through a meeting last week, and a speaker uttered both words in the same breath. It almost caused me to fart in public.
Oh my...the options that opened up. Refraction...reflection...lens...power of said lenses...convex/concave, wavelengths refracting at angles due to refraction indexes.
I’ll give you a bottle of NFS if you can incorporate double-slit refraction into a conversation as a metaphor for something inane. Maybe the dark spots could be where you’re “blind”. Oh my, that’s a rich batch of bullshit to mine right there. I mean, E=mc^2 with e being 3.0x18^8m/s. You could even troll folks with metric/standard conversions.
I can see it now...”oh! I get it now, it was unclear cause you were working in non-visible wavelengths of the electromagnetic w and using feet/second, but once I converted your metaphor to metric and applied the appropriate sensors, it all made sense. Should we stop for lunch now?”
Jason Babcock
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