As in the the Fox News person Rita Cosby, who was describing a Little League baseball player with this phase: "He literally blew the spectators away!" That earned her a letter, cc'd to Roger Ailes and Rupert Murdoch with a lesson about the meaning of the word "literally" and what it would look like if the child "literally" blew the spectators away.
Oh, @Michelle Anderson ... yes! I get such a kick out of that when I hear it! Things like "I literally tasted that a hundred years ago when I was a kid"... uh, really?!
One that still makes me shudder is the commentator who described the Dutch footballer Arjen Robben as being "literally on fire." Ouch. I liked that one so much that I pinched it to use in my novel.
The response "I'm good," in reply to a general question about how well one is keeping always makes me want to say, "That is for other people to decide."
I agree with you on that. I also dislike the excuse for risky/foolish behavior "You only live once." But I found a good comeback to that: "You only die once, too."
When I'm talking to people I know, I say, "I'm good" because, Shug, I AM good. When I'm talking to prim and proper people , I say, "I am well, thank you. I hope you are also."
"Unbelievable". When someone says that after a remark or statement is made, It's as if they are calling the person who made the remark a liar.
Love this thread - so many funny responses Agree so much with the opening post too I tend to write how I speak, I can't suddenly be someone I'm not to fit in I don't class meself as 'common' - but a 'natural' cockney Common speak - well it makes me teeth itch .......................