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by johnnyanmac 896 days ago
>No, it is actually completely correct.

fair enough, I thought that definition was unofficial or marked as slang.

>No such thing has happened, words can have both literal and figurative meaning.

yes, like "literally" having the definition of "figuratively". I would indeed call that a perversion:

>to divert to a wrong end or purpose

most of the time that is at best marked as slang (such as use of a double negative to mean a negative, and not a soft positive), but I guess that's not my call to make.

1 comments

Hmmm. Personally when the non-disambiguated wikipedia page of a specific word starts with, "$WORD is the ownership of a person as property, especially in regards to their labor." and includes a photo of a physically mutilated other person, then maybe there are reasons to be a bit more careful since it's very easy to pass the wrong message.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery