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by asavadatti 2308 days ago
Not trying to be a jerk but the phrase is "Case in point".
3 comments

It's fine, for all intensive purposes.

(This is what happens when a society stops reading books.)

By in large, you are correct.
I really could care less.
Common guys, getting the phrasing right is not rocket appliances.
Their right hand side doesn't mention it, so I'm intrigued whether this sub-reddit pre-dates Language Log naming almost this same type of mistake an eggcorn?

Specifically an eggcorn involves an erroneous analysis, in the name example a person figures an acorn does look rather like an egg and so maybe that's why the name for it is "eggcorn". Likewise "tow the line" mistakes the metaphor as involving pulling a rope rather than standing against a chalk mark ("toe the line") and "free reign" assumes it's about some analogy to absolute power of kings rather than controlling horses.

Wrong application becoming popular sometimes results in new phrases.
ABCDEFGHIJK ELEMENO-PEE
Similar for "all intensive purposes" vs "all intents and purposes"
Game set in match!
here here! okay, i'm going to reign this in.
You could of been a contender, but I disagree with your basic tenants. You are so bias.

Reading this whole thread is nerve-wracking and puts me through the ringer.

this... makes a lot more sense