A long,
long time ago I did a series of posts here at the Recovering Hopper entitled “Words
I Hate.”
These were
(and still are) linguistical objects that, for some reason I’d try to explain, somehow
would hurl out a harpoon into the thick adipose tissue of my eardrum. And once
snagged, would wiggle back and forth, hooking deeper and deeper with accelerating
and accumulating levels of annoyance. So much so that I’d lose focus of the
original thought the writer or speaker was trying to impart. An earworm, albeit
of the nastiest, parasitical kind.
Well, since
I’ve been watching a lot of videos on the YouTube and listen to all sorts of
Zoom and Teams calls second hand, my attention has been called to a number of
Phrases I Hate.
Here’s the
first, and probably the most prolific one I’ve noticed:
After a
number of explanatory sentences, the speaker utters an apologetic, “Does this make
sense?” often in a faux self-deprecating manner, as a kind of Final Boss grammatical
period at the paragraph’s conclusion.
Does
this make sense?
Ugh,
forgive me, but that’s an illustration of the heinous phrase in action.
Anyway, I utterly
hate this lazy phrase. I encourage you to surgically incise it from your verbal
lexicon immediately and with brutal efficiency.
Boiled
down to its logical skeleton, the phrase Does this make sense? can literally
mean one of two things:
1) I am
such a poor communicator that I need to periodically confirm, several times in
a conversation, whether I am getting my point across to you, no matter how simple
it may be.
or
2) You are
a retard and can’t be trusted to understand possibly very simple ideas.
Both
explanations assume a lowest-common-denominator, dumbed-down approach to communicating.
If 1, why be so hard on yourself? If you truly are a poor communicator, for God’s
sake man take some lessons or hone your skills with a speaking coach. Or if 2, then
please stop communicating until you learn to treat the person you are in
dialogue with respect.
So I beg
of any users of this dopy phrase: Do better. Please, for the sake of Hopper’s poor thick
adipose tissued ear drums.
Grrrr.
(This
message brought to you after a well-meaning podcaster – I assume, since I give
the speaker the benefit of the doubt – just used the phrase twice in the
span of three minutes giving his for-the-everyman interpretation of a speech
given by a Catholic bishop.)
I am a prolific user of the above phrase, but I don’t use it to confirm understanding. In my field, I use to affirm direction. Shortcut for “Are we on the right track?” Am I absolved?
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