1. If Steve has a more efficient way to ask casually I'd love to hear it.
4. This is a useful contraction. Simon needs to relax.
5. I've never heard this before, but disembark sounds like a good alternative to me
6. This is also a contraction designed to sound casual- and less pretentious than most of these complaints.
10. Yes, physicality is a real word. Outside of France language is dynamic.
11. Transport is usually used as a verb; transportation is always a noun. My opinion is that transport acts as a very awkward noun, the same way that forks make poor spoons.
12. You say poh-tay-toe, I say po-tahh-toe, now let's all get along!
14. Relax, not everyone is as pretentious as Graham is.
15. It's a word that people say when they want to sound casual, and not like a stiff-necked English teacher.
16. Again, a variant for sounding relaxed, rather than formal. It's called dialect.
17. The term originated in the 1950s, as a hairstyle called the "bang-off"s. It is nothing new. Even the Beatles referred to themselves as having bangs.
18. Sure, why not? I mean, limiting the variability of language is double-plus ungood!
21. A heads-up is what you offer someone you care about when a piece of news might clobber someone if they contemplate their navel when it arrives. If you didn't care about their wholeness of body you might think the collision looked pretty funny.
22. Do you have another suggestion? I didn't think so.
23. Again, a useful contraction. Chris needs to smoke a bowl.
24. Again, somebody young wants to sound casual and friendly rather than stiff-necked and formal. Relax Simon.
29. Fortnightly? Really? In your world has King Henry the 8th divorced his first wife yet?
36. You're assuming "maths" is an appropriate contraction of "mathematics". Not all contractions retain the character of their parent words. Again, dialect.
37. An Americano is a cup of water percolated through espresso coffee grounds; what you want is a cup of water percolated through non-espresso grounds. When you say that you hate having to order this way it is better to say that you hate your own ignorance.
40. This can be obnoxious if the corruption is intended; common nomenclature uses it ironically. In the latter case it can feel friendly and funny. But I sympathize with you in the former circumstance.
41. I remember a friend of mine told me he once dated a Newfie. He was headed out for awhile, and she asked him, "where you to?" He replied, "I'm right f*n here!" (paraphrased for the forums)
42. Yeah, no thanks. Assuming you mean this in terms of rhetoric, period is a concise, definitive method for delivering emphasis. "Full stop" is rhetorically weaker.
44. Any other ideas to describe a program with a definite, recurring frequency with intermittent variability? Then why is a metaphor that compares that program to a physical phenomenon a bad thing?
45. This is only a problem because pervasiveness has rendered "issue" a cliche. With an articulate orator it can still be funny.
48. Actually, I would say it that way. Otherwise the sentence fragment lacks the complex predicate. Maybe your dialect is just more casual than mine?
49. Uhh, what? You have a problem with an impatient imperative?
50. This sentence fragment is meant to be ironic; you even explained that in your criticism, Jonathan. A person says they could care less when she actually couldn't, and that she cares so little that she won't even articulate herself properly. Do you listen when other people speak?
Honestly, most of these complaints are bad.