That means you could NOT care less!
I am sooooooo tired of hearing, "I could care less."
Could you really care less?
If you could you probably wouldn't need to make that statement.
The expression I could not care less originally meant 'it would be impossible for me to care less than I do because I do not care at all'. It was originally a British saying and came to the US in the 1950s. It is senseless to transform it into the now-common I could care less. If you could care less, that means you care at least a little. The original is quite sarcastic and the other form is clearly nonsense. ~dictionary.com
8 comments:
I definitely COULD care less about this post.
Bzzzzzzz
There's a bee in Mister Wordy Rappinghood's bonnet.
i love the last part of the explanation, "...and the other form is clearly nonsense."
Nunsense, my dear, nunsense.
I completely understand your frustration. Working where I do causes me to cringe more times than I like to admit because of the "country folk" that work around me.
Since our mom was an English major we were corrected (at least I was) when we were young. I do the same for my kids.
So
Wow! Such passion!
I amen you brother Scott, "irregardless" of what anyone says.
(although I'm far from perfect in this area, I've noticed, since starting this blogging bidness).
That and the commonly used "whatever" are annoying. Whatever is not ambivalent but passive-aggressive. I'm with you on the overuse of trite phrases.
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