Iconic
Oh no. Here’s the latest lazy speak word that follows on from ‘passionate’ as the most over-used word by the can’t be ar**ed to truly engage their brains copywriters. In the last week I have seen it applied to Victoria Beckham and Sadie Frost, whom I wouldn’t recognise if she walked past me in iconic store Harvey Nichols. In the magazine of the North West Regional Development Agency it was used to describe a yet to be built centre at a new wildlife reserve in Lancashire and an industrial townscape (that I didn’t recognise) somewhere in ffice:smarttags" />Manchester. It’s popping up all over the place in advertising and press articles – come on you lazy hacks – make your brains work and earn your corn. We can still have icons; the Holy Cross is a good one, the Star of David, maybe that picture of Che Guevera and Winston in his bowler with a fat cigar giving the v for Victory. All iconic but precisely because they are we don’t need to be reminded that they are, so we can happily lose the word. A reversed v for victory to the word and the plodders who use it.
BY Rffice
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'schedule' - simply because most people pronounce it 'skedule', as the Americans do, and it drives me MAD. Also 'secretary' and 'nuclear', again because of mispronunciation ('sekketary' and 'nukular').
Or for sheer dullness, the word 'like', as in 'I like that'. Find a better word!
What delicate ears I have!
by K
'Frank'...because it always signifies that the speaker is honest straight forward and Right...only reply is******* off!
but ...because it invalidates everything ...dismantling .....
flaccid....everything about it..sounds horrid..implications..physical psyhological emotional...not a SATISFYING word
by SJ
'Obviously' by Barry Wood
'Fine' - because it prevents communication. Too easy to hide behind.
Janet Lewison