brainpanhandler wrote:"Pointless" quotation marks. Stop. Just "stop" it.
For that matter, business value propositions (a.k.a. taglines) in quotes. WTF is the difference between:
Where the customer comes first
and
"Where the customer comes first"
I mean, were all these contract repairmen consulted by a lawyer to
make sure they put their tagline in quotes on their vehicle lettering so they can't be held to it legally? Is that all it takes? Is that the marketing equivalent of leaving your four-ways on when you park illegaly, because technically you're just "stopped"?
Dustbin.MacCruiskeen wrote:"This bears all the hallmarks of"
Oh yes. Also,
"Suffice it to say" because it's really ugly when people about whom I care end up mangling it so badly that it reflects poorly upon them as pseudointellectuals.
WTF is "suffisa?"Also:
"When all is said and done" which never happens, by definition.
And I've said it here before, but it bears repeating:
The list goes on and on". That's nice. Thanks for sharing. Very informative.
