• @[email protected]
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    18 days ago

    You don’t seem to understand the meaning of the word “literally.” This post figuratively said so.

      • @[email protected]
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        018 days ago

        Hi. Third party here. They’re correct: that’s literally not what literally means. Ok thanks bye.

        • @[email protected]
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          018 days ago

          Fourth party here: definitions are descriptive not prescriptive and vary by common usage. Due to current common usage, literally means both literally and figuratively, with the original definition slowly losing ground. So no one is correct.

          • @[email protected]
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            018 days ago

            True, but if you wanted to articulate the concept formerly known as “Literally”, how would you do it? I just woke up, and my brain hasn’t booted all the way to desktop yet, but I can’t immediately think of another word to fill the niche.

          • SmokeyDope
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            18 days ago

            But is it a figurative burying or a meta-literal one? I mean if you really think about things entomologically and we pick apart the Latin root words of “bury” and “dogpile” we might just find that the meaning of lemmy dogpile changes completely depending on context, literally figuratively.

            Language is fucked. We really need telepathically beaming abstract concepts directly into brain matter so I don’t have to crawl through linguist brainrot reply chains.