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Dave Cornwell December 5th 07 11:28 AM

Completely [OT]
 
Apologies for this but who else is there to bounce it off? I've recently
noticed among certain friends and family that they frequently reply with the
word "exactly" on those (rare) occasions when they agree with what I am
saying. It is becoming as annoying as the "rising intonation" at the end of
sentences which was seems to have had its heyday. Is anyone else noticing
this or is it a local thing?

Dave



Gianna December 5th 07 11:33 AM

Completely [OT]
 
Dave Cornwell wrote:
Apologies for this but who else is there to bounce it off? I've recently
noticed among certain friends and family that they frequently reply with the
word "exactly" on those (rare) occasions when they agree with what I am
saying. It is becoming as annoying as the "rising intonation" at the end of
sentences which was seems to have had its heyday. Is anyone else noticing
this or is it a local thing?



Absolutely.
Hard to miss, innit.


--
Gianna

http://www.buchan-meteo.org.uk
* * * * * * *

Scott W December 5th 07 11:37 AM

Completely [OT]
 
On 5 Dec, 12:28, "Dave Cornwell"
wrote:
Apologies for this but who else is there to bounce it off? I've recently
noticed among certain friends and family that they frequently reply with the
word "exactly" on those (rare) occasions when they agree with what I am
saying. It is becoming as annoying as the "rising intonation" at the end of
sentences which was seems to have had its heyday. Is anyone else noticing
this or is it a local thing?

Dave


It is as annoying as the presenters on the BBC who say "ahead of"
instead of "before". Annoying Americanisms that have been creeping
into our language for decades

Peter Thomas December 5th 07 12:01 PM

Completely [OT]
 
In message
,
Scott W writes
On 5 Dec, 12:28, "Dave Cornwell"
wrote:
Apologies for this but who else is there to bounce it off? I've recently
noticed among certain friends and family that they frequently reply with the
word "exactly" on those (rare) occasions when they agree with what I am
saying. It is becoming as annoying as the "rising intonation" at the end of
sentences which was seems to have had its heyday. Is anyone else noticing
this or is it a local thing?

Dave


It is as annoying as the presenters on the BBC who say "ahead of"
instead of "before". Annoying Americanisms that have been creeping
into our language for decades



Very much so.


--
Peter Thomas

Bonos Ego December 5th 07 12:04 PM

Completely [OT]
 
Spot on, I totally agree!

Martin Rowley December 5th 07 12:05 PM

Completely [OT]
 
"Scott W" wrote in message
...
On 5 Dec, 12:28, "Dave Cornwell"
wrote:
Apologies for this but who else is there to bounce it off? I've
recently
noticed among certain friends and family that they frequently reply
with the
word "exactly" on those (rare) occasions when they agree with what
I am
saying. It is becoming as annoying as the "rising intonation" at
the end of
sentences which was seems to have had its heyday. Is anyone else
noticing
this or is it a local thing?

Dave


It is as annoying as the presenters on the BBC who say "ahead of"
instead of "before". Annoying Americanisms that have been creeping
into our language for decades



.... or even "exactly right" (what's the smiley for a groan?)

and how about 'going forward' - WS Gilbert would have had fun if he
was still around.



Martin.



--
Martin Rowley
E:
W: booty.org.uk



Ptarmigan December 5th 07 12:22 PM

Completely [OT]
 
Apologies for this but who else is there to bounce it off?
I've recently
noticed among certain friends and family that they frequently
reply with the
word "exactly" on those (rare) occasions when they agree with
what I am
saying. It is becoming as annoying as the "rising intonation"
at the end of
sentences which was seems to have had its heyday. Is anyone
else noticing
this or is it a local thing?

Dave


It is as annoying as the presenters on the BBC who say "ahead
of"
instead of "before". Annoying Americanisms that have been
creeping
into our language for decades


Not to mention 'prior to' instead of 'before'.

Anne



Brian Blair December 5th 07 12:31 PM

Completely [OT]
 
It stems from TV and radio and the perceived abruptness of yes or no.

It's the new "basically"

The intonation, I think, is from North America where they use it to pose
a question when words are missed out that are crucial to the questioning
sentence.

brian
rainbows
aberfeldy

Dave Cornwell wrote:
Apologies for this but who else is there to bounce it off? I've recently
noticed among certain friends and family that they frequently reply with the
word "exactly" on those (rare) occasions when they agree with what I am
saying. It is becoming as annoying as the "rising intonation" at the end of
sentences which was seems to have had its heyday. Is anyone else noticing
this or is it a local thing?

Dave



jochta December 5th 07 12:32 PM

Completely [OT]
 
Dave Cornwell wrote:
Apologies for this but who else is there to bounce it off? I've recently
noticed among certain friends and family that they frequently reply with the
word "exactly" on those (rare) occasions when they agree with what I am
saying. It is becoming as annoying as the "rising intonation" at the end of
sentences which was seems to have had its heyday. Is anyone else noticing
this or is it a local thing?

Dave



Exactly.

Nick Gardner December 5th 07 01:24 PM

Completely [OT]
 
The intonation, I think, is from North America where they use it to pose a
question when words are missed out that are crucial to the questioning
sentence.


I think it was Stephen Fry who once put AQI (HRT in America) into Room 101.
It stands for Australian Questioning Intonation though I believe, as you
say, it originated in the States.

More he

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_rising_terminal
________________
Nick G
Otter Valley, Devon
83 m amsl
http://www.ottervalley.co.uk




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