Most Bizarre Errors You Constantly See

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maninahat

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Ed James said:
thaluikhain said:
Little Woodsman said:
Where I live it's people not understanding that 'Hispanic' and 'Mexican' are *not* interchangeable terms! Drives me up the wall...
Oh yeah...likewise Muslim/Arab/Persian, and people not knowing where Africa and the Middle East are.
Official documents are the worst for that. In Britain the list of nationalities that come up when filling in something official are;
White
Asian
Black
Sometimes Indian/Pakistani
Then Mixed combinations of everything above.
They usually have subsections "White British", or "black British" and many other variations. The NHS equal opportunity questionnaires at my place of work have about 20 or so options.

Speaking of forms though, I don't like how they often use "atheist" and no "non-religious" option. Of course there is a lot of overlap, but I'm not sure everyone who doesn't identify with a major world religion is also godless.
 

beastro

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saluraropicrusa said:
Or cassowaries, who can rip you open with a kick.
Never been a verified case of that happened AFAIK. Just like reports of wild Orcas trying to eat people.
 

TorchofThanatos

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SILENTrampancy said:
TorchofThanatos said:
Vegosiux said:
amaranth_dru said:
Meaning that the state nor federal gov't can't make laws that favor one religion over another, which includes atheism.
I'll assume poor wording, but that's another error, talking about atheism as if it was religion.

Oh and while we're on religion, another error I commonly see is assuming that Christianity is the same as Catholicism.
Hmmmm... this is an interesting one.
I would define religion as a set of beliefs. An atheism is supposed to be a lack of beliefs. It is kinda like a shadow. Shadow is made by a lack of light. problem is that I know many people (both with belief and with out) that would define atheism as a belief that there is no God. That would than make it a religion. Stupid I know but people are stupid. Both sides have their crazy ones.
re·li·gion noun \ri-ˈli-jən\
: the belief in a god or in a group of gods

: an organized system of beliefs, ceremonies, and rules used to worship a god or a group of gods

: an interest, a belief, or an activity that is very important to a person or group

Merriam Webster does not lie. I am Atheist, or without a god. It is not religion. It is a state of being : P

Also, I hate it when people call athiesm a religion, since by definition it is without the qualities that define 'religion'. There is no belief nor faith. This theory simply makes the most sense without introducing inconsistencies with how the world has been proven to work. It doesn't ask more questions than it answers, though it also comes with the caveat that answers must be found, not given.
Usually when I have seen people call atheism a religion is when religious people use atheism as if it was. Massive speeches given by popular members and the consistent "inter faith" dialogue. Atheism is not a religion but some dumb fools are going to use it like it is one. it is interesting how quickly someone human came go from believing that there is a god and trying to convert other to "believing" that there is no god and trying to convert other. That is not atheism but it is funny to watch. If you are content why can't everyone be happy with that. I am a happy christian and you are a happy atheist and it is all good.
 

Zack Alklazaris

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NASA is not a sink hole in the American budget. NASAs outright buying of material matched with its innovations (such as GPS and cellular networks) have made this country money. Even today when the British use their car's GPS its being directed at American satellites.

http://useconomy.about.com/od/usfederalbudget/p/nasa_budget_cost.htm

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If I get into a religious argument the go to "You should read the bible before you attack it. I read it, it's great!" loses its effectiveness when you can't tell me what version you read. Your lack of researching the thing that you hold so dear drives me crazy.

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And this, I shit you not, the Star Wars: Special Editions are NOT the original movies that was shown in theaters more than thirty years ago. To be fair this seems to come from a much younger generation, but still...
 

Vegosiux

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Another one I just remembered.

"E.g." does not mean "ergo". It means "for example".[footnote]Exempli Gratia[/footnote] Though you could say "gratuitous example", heh...
 

Asita

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Archangel357 said:
I always thought that nothing could beat "could care less" for sheer idiocy, but the rise of "could of" basically drove me into a genocidal rage. There is literally no scenario in the English language in which "I could of said" could even begin to make anything vaguely approximating sense.

And personally, I'd wager that it's actually more common among native English speakers, since one almost never learns anything about the grammar of one's own language.
When written, there's little in the way of excuses. If you're referring to what you literally hear, the proper transcription is "could've", the conjunction between "could" and "have".
 

Deadcyde

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The US's lower class citizens being apologist for the capitalist ideals that made them lower class in the first place.

Or the use of the identifier "feminist" by people apparently arguing for egalitarianism.

that the 152 pokemon isn't missingno but is chikorita.

edit: it's been mentioned to me that missingno is a name for the lack of the pokemon being there due to a glitch. So if pokemon were religions then missingno would be atheism and therefore not really having a number.


I have a feeling the guy from billy madison saying I've made you all dumber for the experience is about to refute my edit
 

Thaluikhain

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Vegosiux said:
Another one I just remembered.

"E.g." does not mean "ergo". It means "for example".[footnote]Exempli Gratia[/footnote] Though you could say "gratuitous example", heh...
And i.e. means that is, it's not the same as e.g.

Deadcyde said:
Or the use of the identifier "feminist" by people apparently arguing for egalitarianism.
What do you mean?

Gender equality is part of equality in general.

Now, being feminist doesn't (necessarily) mean you support, for example, gay rights, but there is a movement within modern feminism which say it should. If you care about all women, you have to care about gay women, which means you have to care about gay rights. "My feminism will be intersectional or it will be bullshit" - Flavia Dzodan
 

Deadcyde

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Because focusing on one gender will bring about equality for all genders. As that is clearly what feminism is.

Clearly no problem with that. (Yes that was sarcasm.)

But that aside, My point was people mistaking feminism to mean equality. (It doesn't, not even gender equality. If you don't believe me, feel free to ask transvestites. )
 

Thaluikhain

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Deadcyde said:
Because focusing on one gender will bring about equality for all genders. As that is clearly what feminism is.
If you aren't interested in what feminism actually is, yes.

Deadcyde said:
(It doesn't, not even gender equality. If you don't believe me, feel free to ask transvestites. )
True, feminism has a serious intersectionality problem, though I'm not sure that means it doesn't mean equality.
 

Spaggiari

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Naeo said:
No, "literally" is not being used "incorrectly," unless you're a pedantic prescriptivist who thinks that there's some form of "proper English" that everyone is required to speak (completely ignoring the concept of "dialect," "idiolects," and "that is moronic"). Yes, it's annoying as holy hell to hear it used every third word, but the meaning is shifting to that of a generic intensifier. For historical parallel, "soon" used to mean "immediately." But, people kept using it so hyperbolically ("I'll do that soon [right away]") that the meaning has shifted to "in the near future" rather than "right this very second".
I... I love you.
 

Deadcyde

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thaluikhain said:
Deadcyde said:
Because focusing on one gender will bring about equality for all genders. As that is clearly what feminism is.
If you aren't interested in what feminism actually is, yes.

Deadcyde said:
(It doesn't, not even gender equality. If you don't believe me, feel free to ask transvestites. )
True, feminism has a serious intersectionality problem, though I'm not sure that means it doesn't mean equality.
You mean I just pointed out that contemporary feminism as a title has serious inconsistency issues, let alone as an equality based idealism, so you're seeking to obfuscate that point behind straw man (because clearly not believing your point of view must be because I know nothing about feminism) or gray area justification ("well, you're right about feminists not believing in equality.. but because I believe it to be, so it must be")

Come on, sure you see the logic errors in naming something that proclaims to be about equality for all genders after a single gender as well as the original ideal of empowering women that which feminism was named is no longer the single desired outcome of gender equality making feminism, at best a misnomer.(my original point) Secondly that none of you even agree on a mandate with some of it straying very far into outright bigotry in the name of "feminism" something any feminist proclaims to be outright against.
 

Thaluikhain

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Deadcyde said:
Come on, sure you see the logic errors in naming something that proclaims to be about equality for all genders after a single gender as well as the original ideal of empowering women that which feminism was named is no longer the single desired outcome of gender equality making feminism, at best a misnomer.(my original point)
Ah, if you mean the name should be changed...I don't agree with that, but, I agree that name might not be the best.

Deadcyde said:
Secondly that none of you even agree on a mandate with some of it straying very far into outright bigotry in the name of "feminism" something any feminist proclaims to be outright against.
That's certainly true, yes.
 

Spaggiari

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Deadcyde said:
Or the use of the identifier "feminist" by people apparently arguing for egalitarianism.
This.

People not understanding the set-subset relationship. It's possible to be both a feminist and an egalitarian. This is a lot like saying "I can't stand when people say 'Sub' when what they mean is 'Sandwich'"

You are creating a false dichotomy.

Deadcyde said:
But that aside, My point was people mistaking feminism to mean equality. (It doesn't, not even gender equality. If you don't believe me, feel free to ask transvestites. )
I'll be sure to ask my Feminist trans friend in the morning.

The problem here is that you're taking the views of a certain set of feminists and applying it to all forms of feminism. While it's true that there are feminists who believe that Transgenderism is an affront to womanhood or whatever, there are those who disagree. Most of the trans-hating kind are associated with what's known as the 'second wave' from the 60s and 70s but the movement, like all others, is always evolving.

It's a lot like how 'liberal' used to indicate a belief in property ownership, laissez-faire economics, and generally all the things that would be called 'libertarian' nowadays, but today means something totally different.

If you believe in the equality of the sexes, then you are a feminist whether you're the Trans-hating kind or the Trans-friendly kind. Just like if you believe in individual liberty, then you are a liberal whether you're the Universal Healthcare and Welfare kind, or the Free Market and limited government kind.

Deadcyde said:
Because focusing on one gender will bring about equality for all genders. As that is clearly what feminism is.

Clearly no problem with that. (Yes that was sarcasm.)
Did you know that when the abolitionists in America were trying to free the slaves they were only focusing on one race? How could they bring about equality for all races if they were only focusing on one race?

The answer is that white people didn't need freeing.

If I say 'We should free all these African slaves, man. I think we may be violating their rights and frankly it's disgusting', you probably wouldn't shoot back with 'Yeah well, white people got problems too man, sometimes they have to live on the street because they're homeless. I think you should be an egalitarian and help everybody man, not just that specific group you were talking about before'
 

OneCatch

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Elementary - Dear Watson said:
Also... as it is a "tank busting" weapon, with a specifically designed shaped charge that melts through the tanks armour, creating a fragment inside that bounces around and killing everyone inside, it is annoying that in most games you have to shoot a tank 5-6 times to defeat it sometimes... and it will always completely destroy the tank inside out, just so you know it's dead. Also unrealistic! Watch the footage from Libya and you realise sticking a bomb (250-500lbs, much much bigger warhead than the 5lb RPG-7) through the top of a tank will sometimes barely show any signs of destruction!
I hate to be a pedant, but this is a thread of pedantry so I'll go right ahead:

Anti-tank weapons don't specifically melt through tank armour.

Armour piercing warheads just smash through, various sabot rounds do it better.
HEAT warheads used shaped charges which create a pressurised jet of solid metal to punch through it.
HESH warhead create spalling on the inside of the tank armour without penetrating.

Incendiary weapons can kill tanks by incapacitating the crew or damaging the engine or whatever, but no weapon actually melts armour as it's primary effect.

But I entirely agree with what you said about games showing tanks 'catching fire but still working' after a few hits then blowing up after a few more. Either the weapon penetrates or it doesn't, and if it penetrates far enough into a modern tank to start a fire it's probably already killed everyone and completely ruined the inside.
 

Deadcyde

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Spaggiari said:
Deadcyde said:
Or the use of the identifier "feminist" by people apparently arguing for egalitarianism.
This.

People not understanding the set-subset relationship. It's possible to be both a feminist and an egalitarian. This is a lot like saying "I can't stand when people say 'Sub' when what they mean is 'Sandwich'"

You are creating a false dichotomy.

Deadcyde said:
But that aside, My point was people mistaking feminism to mean equality. (It doesn't, not even gender equality. If you don't believe me, feel free to ask transvestites. )
I'll be sure to ask my Feminist trans friend in the morning.

The problem here is that you're taking the views of a certain set of feminists and applying it to all forms of feminism. While it's true that there are feminists who believe that Transgenderism is an affront to womanhood or whatever, there are those who disagree. Most of the trans-hating kind are associated with what's known as the 'second wave' from the 60s and 70s but the movement, like all others, is always evolving.

It's a lot like how 'liberal' used to indicate a belief in property ownership, laissez-faire economics, and generally all the things that would be called 'libertarian' nowadays, but today means something totally different.

If you believe in the equality of the sexes, then you are a feminist whether you're the Trans-hating kind or the Trans-friendly kind. Just like if you believe in individual liberty, then you are a liberal whether you're the Universal Healthcare and Welfare kind, or the Free Market and limited government kind.

Deadcyde said:
Because focusing on one gender will bring about equality for all genders. As that is clearly what feminism is.

Clearly no problem with that. (Yes that was sarcasm.)
Did you know that when the abolitionists in America were trying to free the slaves they were only focusing on one race? How could they bring about equality for all races if they were only focusing on one race?

The answer is that white people didn't need freeing.

If I say 'We should free all these African slaves, man. I think we may be violating their rights and frankly it's disgusting', you probably wouldn't shoot back with 'Yeah well, white people got problems too man, sometimes they have to live on the street because they're homeless. I think you should be an egalitarian and help everybody man, not just that specific group you were talking about before'
your analogy is so screwed i can't even bring the words forth to show you how offensive that is...
 

Fredvdp

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Lovely Mixture said:
Frankenstein is not the name of the monster, it's the name of the doctor. How the hell did this error begin in the first place?
I think it started with the movie "Bride of Frankenstein". The title refers to Frankenstein's wife, but the movie is also about Frankenstein making a female creature. Many viewers assume that the title refers to the female creature and that the male creature is therefore named Frankenstein.
 

Batou667

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Ooh, ooh, I have some.

Verbal fudge-ups:

- Turrent instead of turret, "squirl" instead of squirrel, "melk" instead of milk,

- generally instead of genuinely,

- people who think "then" and "than" are interchangeable,

- literally when people mean practically/figuratively/virtually. I listened to a radio talk show where some woman was saying "after our breakup, I was literally in pieces". What, your husband was an axe murderer? Don't abuse the English language, you silly cow.

- arcs instead of ask (that may be unique to the part of London I live in).

- pressurised when people mean pressured - "I was pressurised into doing overtime" - what, the boss came up and physically squeezed you?

- misunderstood/bungled phrases like "it's a doggy dog world", "walah" (instead of voila), "persay" (instead of per se), "more and less", "ect" instead of etc, "verse" instead of versus, "wet your appetite", "low and behold", "for all intensive purposes", "escape goat" instead of scapegoat...

- I have a special hatred for verbal cliches or puns that have become so overused that people no longer really know what the originating phrase or context was and the modified form becomes its own phrase. Like, "the eyes have it" in the context of a mascara advert.

- Here's one that used to infuriate my brother, but only partially justifiably. The use of "but" to imply "almost". "The man was found all but dead" - ALL but dead? What, so he was also singing, dancing, cartwheeling, basically exhibiting every behaviour associated with people who AREN'T dead? Of course the word "but" has multiple meanings so the example is technically fine, but it still sounds counter intuitive.

- Mixing exact and indistinct units. When a game is advertised as having "Over 14 playable characters!" I want to ask, how many, 15? 16? If we were rounding to the nearest 10 or even the nearest five it'd be fine to be vague, but why give us an exact, unrounded integer and then vaguely say "over"?

- Repeatedly pluralising. The word "texts" is already a plural, you don't have to say "I sent three textses". When I worked in a clothes shop I sometimes had customers asking where the "vestses" were.

Movie physics:

- Audible explosions in space.

- When a movie shows a planetary alignment and the planets are all neatly lined up like a row of tennis balls, completely disregarding their relative sizes or the massive distances between them (I'm thinking that shitty Lara Croft film).

- Related: big objects that stay big regardless of distance. Like in the end sequence of Sonic Adventure 2, the Death Egg orbits the Earth and passes out of view behind it - at a visible size that would imply it's the area of Asia.

- Some dude fires off a salvo of bullets, the action slows down Matrix-style and the bullets are all traveling together like a swarm of bees. Bullshit! Take an Uzi: 600 rounds/min, muzzle velocity 400 m/s. There'd be a 40m gap between each bullet.

- Zero inertia. Iron Man just fell from space into concrete, but he's wearing his suit, so it's OK! No, he should be pulp inside his (intact or otherwise) suit. Same with scifi, every time a ship goes to Warp or Lightspeed or whatever the crew should become a 2D layer on the aft bulkhead. I know Star Trek has "inertial dampeners" for this, but still...

- The anime-originated thing where a phenomenally sharp sword cuts through a person or a monster and they carry on walking for a moment before the two halves slide apart. It's just silly, it's like when Wile E Coyote walks off a cliff and only starts falling when he realises there's no ground under him. Well, OK, that I could concede to being a stylisation or artistic license. But when the person/monster splits apart and there's a few intact strands of viscera/mucous connecting the halves of the torso... that makes no sense. Did the blade cut through, or didn't it?