You Literally Sound Stupid

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Revision as of 19:35, 17 September 2019 by Ke0etz (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Literally: a crutch word. File:literally3.png Some dictionary "trustees" are adding the “non-literal” version of literally to its offerings. Well-known names such as...")
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Literally: a crutch word.

Some dictionary "trustees" are adding the “non-literal” version of literally to its offerings. Well-known names such as Merriam and Cambridge have followed in Google’s footsteps by including a meaning that goes something like “used to acknowledge that something isn’t literally true but is used for emphasis or to express a strong feeling.”

Your speech literally becomes less effective, as it is literally lost in the usage of tautological repetitive diction. Many basics literally claim that using, “literally” literally strengthens their sentence because it literally puts an extra emphasis on what they are literally saying "literally" happened. Literally.