One of my biggest pet peeves is semantic pedantry, especially if it hinges on invalidating colloquial usage of a term.

It's one thing to correct somebody who mistakingly uses a similar-sounding but different-meaning word than what they intended. A good example of this is correcting someone who says "equivocal" when that person actually meant "equivalent."

However, it's another thing entirely to fail to understand that words are shaped by how society uses them, not merely a dictionary or an educational textbook. An example of this would be someone saying that it's invalid for humans to identify as asexual as a sexual orientation because in biology, the term "asexual" describes organisms that can reproduce without sexual activity.

Being unable to differentiate between connotation and denotation isn't the level of intellect people think it is. It's actually the contrary, as it shows a lack of nuance and an effort to grasp at straws only done by small-minded people who think that solely adhering to literal definitions and rejecting common usage is somehow indicative of some heightened degree of intelligence.

I felt inspired to say this because someone on a YouTube video wrote a comment pertaining to Indigenous people, and a "scholar" responded, "What you're saying makes no sense because everyone is Indigenous to somewhere on the planet."

It's the degree of smugness that is so damn disproportionate with how warranted the smugness actually is that gets me.

Also, this isn't referring to instances where discussing the meaning of a word actually serves some purpose and isn't just nitpicking. That's a whole other subject.

nerd left-arrow Basically, fuck these people! right-arrow smuglord

  • GarfieldOfficial [he/him, comrade/them]
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    7 hours ago

    My favorite irl pedantry is correcting -phobes that using “them” in the singular is actually grammatically correct. Since it’s usually an argument with smuglord pedants and civility libs it usually gets them all riled up. Disregarding that I don’t really care about grammar, it’s fun to do a little bad faith and remind them their ignorance is bottomless.

    • TechnoUnionTypeBeat [he/him, they/them]
      ·
      4 hours ago

      What makes me legitimately mad about -phobes trying that is that the singular "they" is natural language. Every fucking -phobe uses it because it just flows absolutely naturally in the English language and fucking everybody uses it without ever thinking about it

      But the moment they're asked to do it for an enby, they act as if we've asked them to choose one of their own limbs to sacrifice