"This day in history" Is it the most irritating phrase ever?

"This day in history" doesn't bother me in the slightest. I see it as reference to an anniversary of something. No more, no less.
Use of "I could care less" instead of the more appropriate "I couldn't care less"has sadly reached epidemic proportions in the US and it grates on my nerves.
I've noticed brows furrow and frowns form over the use of "quick fast and in a hurry". Use that in my presence and you'll have to give me a minute... that faint smile and faraway look in my eyes is because I heard that phrase in a thick cajun accent and have been momentarily transported to another time and place.
 
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It's the sentiment behind "This day in history" that riles me. The chief perpetrator uses it when describing F1. OK, a lot of people watch, me included. But it's not important; mildly entertaining sometimes. Most definitely not historical. Historical is something that has far-reaching consequences, possibly not apparent at the time, not something momentarily attention-grabbing that will be forgotten within the year.
 
Unfortunately, it's not only children that insert "like" into just about every sentence. Many adults do it also.

It's like no one speaks properly anymore.
For me that is like a pause word giving the speaker time to think about what to say next.
Persons being interviewed about a difficult or contentious subject often use it or another variant like ' ...emm', ' ... uhhh' , or similar.
If you really are thinking hard about describing or explaining something you need sometimes to insert a short pause to collect your thoughts for a moment.
That's where those inserts become useful, but many listeners do not understand that and attribute it to uncertainty.

Jan
 
For me that is like a pause word giving the speaker time to think about what to say next.
Persons being interviewed about a difficult or contentious subject often use it or another variant like ' ...emm', ' ... uhhh' , or similar.
If you really are thinking hard about describing or explaining something you need sometimes to insert a short pause to collect your thoughts for a moment.
That's where those inserts become useful, but many listeners do not understand that and attribute it to uncertainty.

Jan
I don't agree with your analysis at all. For hundreds of years none of us had to resort to using "like" as a means of pausing while talking.

This is nothing more than a bad trend that has developed among younger people.

You will find very few older people, beyond about 40 or so, that do this. And if anyone needs more time to think about what they are saying it's certainly older people, not younger ones.
 
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Unfortunately, it's not only children that insert "like" into just about every sentence. Many adults do it also.

It's like no one speaks properly anymore.
Strange too.
A lot of slang from the 1960's and 1970's quickly disappeared by the 80's and very much the 90's

It seems " like" just stayed from the valley girl talk of the 80's
It did not disappear within 10 years like most slang.
Stuck around for 45 years now.

Why it is so annoying because usually adults dont annoy me as much.
But yes exactly the like thing spans a few generations.
So adults and kids regardless just sound like idiots

The supposedly higher education college kids these days. Use it more than the degenerate low class 80's kids.
Which is what the fictional characters in movies portrayed. Nobody actually used it much in the era it comes from.
 
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A lot of slang from the 1960's and 1970's quickly disappeared by the 80's and very much the 90's
"Cool" didn't. The birth of cool, jazz cats back in the 40's, 50's hit the right note and has been reverberating ever since.

When used genuinely, who can say they won't 'get' the descriptive " Cool"; " Very Cool". Or taking it to the seventies.. " Cool man! "

"Cool as"
 
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