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by socialismisok
1326 days ago
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Ah, the No True Scotsman. You seem to be under the (imo mistaken) impression that language is prescriptive. The idea that we define a term and then people will either use it "correctly" or gave stigma for being wrong. Imo, language is descriptive - people use a word a certain way and the definition evolves to meet that usage. Just like how "literally" means "figuratively" in some contexts. You might feel that's wrong, but fundamentally the language is being used that way. |
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Define roguelike. You tell me what you think it means, and we will see if that definition is applied with consistency.
> Just like how "literally" means "figuratively" in some contexts. You might feel that's wrong, but fundamentally the language is being used that way.
Congratulations, you have discovered sarcasm. The meaning of literally is not different because people employ sarcasm. It means that they are being sarcastic. You literally can't be sarcastic if a word like "literally" doesn't have an agreed upon meaning.