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Why do people say exetera?
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amother
OP  


 

Post Today at 10:49 am
I hear it so often, even from professional speakers. It really makes me cringe.

It's ET CETERA. Not Ex etera
And thanks to my 2nd grade teacher Miss Basch for teaching this to me.
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soproud




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 10:51 am
People just aren’t aware, informed, knowledgeable etc.
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amother
Lawngreen


 

Post Today at 10:52 am
Same thing with expresso.
Nope, it's espresso
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amother
Gray  


 

Post Today at 10:56 am
Because people are humans and they make mistakes?
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my mama




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 10:57 am
My husband just started saying it... it drives me bananas.
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amother
Rose  


 

Post Today at 11:05 am
I haven’t heard it from professional speakers but I hear people say excetra and expresso. The one that really gets to me is ekkscape, as in -he ekkscaped from jail. If it was dh or one of my kids I’d correct them. Otherwise it’s just one of those things like all the women on imamother who work so hard trying to loose weight.
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Genius




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 11:09 am
And ax and “could care less”
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zaq  




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 11:21 am
For the same reasons they say "axed" a question, storage "draws," a good "idear" and other jarring expressions: ignorance and/or laziness.

Then again, I say "gonna" and I'm neither (totally) ignorant nor (exceptionally) lazy. That's just how people say "going to" where I grew up.I could say "going to" but it would require planning and effort, neither of which usually comes into play in ordinary conversation.
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b.chadash




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 12:00 pm
zaq wrote:
For the same reasons they say "axed" a question, storage "draws," a good "idear" and other jarring expressions: ignorance and/or laziness.

Then again, I say "gonna" and I'm neither (totally) ignorant nor (exceptionally) lazy. That's just how people say "going to" where I grew up.I could say "going to" but it would require planning and effort, neither of which usually comes into play in ordinary conversation.


I think gonna is an acceptable slang word. It's not wrong, just slang. Ect is wrong. Comes from ignorance.
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amother
Steelblue


 

Post Today at 12:02 pm
I hear some people pronounce it "iksetra".
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mizle10




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 12:04 pm
amother Lawngreen wrote:
Same thing with expresso.
Nope, it's espresso


This is one thing I cannot handle.
I will always correct it TMI
I really really love coffee lol
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penguin




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 12:05 pm
Gonna is an acceptable word in the NYT Spelling Bee. Unfortunately.

Screamed pronounced skraymt. No, it's scream and then add -ed. Why on earth does anyone think otherwise? (If it comes from Yiddish, someone please enlighten us!)


Last edited by penguin on Thu, Nov 28 2024, 12:06 pm; edited 1 time in total
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NechaMom  




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 12:06 pm
I know someone who pronounces and spells only as "olny". Some people appreciate to be corrected and some people get insulted. So olny those who are open to learn will end up being smarter, more coherent, better spellers, ekcetra!
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Ruchel




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 12:11 pm
Calling a male widow

Saying "I'm looking for a male masseuse"
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amother
Moonstone


 

Post Today at 1:06 pm
"expecially" drives me nuts
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amother
Brass  


 

Post Today at 1:24 pm
b.chadash wrote:
I think gonna is an acceptable slang word. It's not wrong, just slang. Ect is wrong. Comes from ignorance.


A lot of pronunciations are acceptable and common in different areas and among various groups of people.

I say exetra (although it's not a word I say often) because that's how I hear it said. I'm aware that it is written etcetera, and I write it correctly. I don't think I'm lazy just because I'm using a common pronunciation that people in my environment use and understand. I'll speak correctly when the setting requires it.
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amother
  OP


 

Post Today at 1:34 pm
amother Brass wrote:
A lot of pronunciations are acceptable and common in different areas and among various groups of people.

I say exetra (although it's not a word I say often) because that's how I hear it said. I'm aware that it is written etcetera, and I write it correctly. I don't think I'm lazy just because I'm using a common pronunciation that people in my environment use and understand. I'll speak correctly when the setting requires it.


Ok. That's interesting.
Since exetera does not have more syllables than etcetera, I wouldn't assume laziness, but rather ignorance if someone says it incorrectly.
On the other hand, "gonna," is both acceptable and quicker to say than "going to."
It's interesting to me that people would purposefully use a wrong word if they know the correct one, even though it's not any more cumbersome to say.
But, you do you...
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amother
  Gray  


 

Post Today at 1:54 pm
A lot of these “mistakes” are intentional and ghetto.
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amother
  Gray  


 

Post Today at 1:55 pm
Ruchel wrote:
Calling a male widow

Saying "I'm looking for a male masseuse"


Ok this is funny LOL
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mamaleh




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 1:59 pm
zaq wrote:
For the same reasons they say "axed" a question, storage "draws," a good "idear" and other jarring expressions: ignorance and/or laziness.

Then again, I say "gonna" and I'm neither (totally) ignorant nor (exceptionally) lazy. That's just how people say "going to" where I grew up.I could say "going to" but it would require planning and effort, neither of which usually comes into play in ordinary conversation.


I will agree with most of your examples being ignorance and/or laziness but “idear” is a regional accent in New England (especially around Boston). They drop some Rs and add others. “I have an idear, let’s pahk the cah in Hahvad Yahd.”

Having grown up near there (with parents who did not have that accent) we often found it quite funny. We were friendly with a family whose eldest daughter was called Mala, so that’s what we called her, until we got an invitation to a graduation party at their house for someone named Marla. It took us a good few minutes to realize what was going on.

While it may be jarring, it is not ignorance or laziness that causes it, more of a tomato/tomahto type situation.
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