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by jplrssn
7 days ago
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You're right, I was thinking of "slammed" as being part of take-down style news reporting. Looking at Google Ngram, usage of "slams" started inflecting upwards in the early 90's and then even more strongly in the mid-2000's. [0] I wonder if that second increase represents the type of usage I had in mind. (I looked at "slams" rather than "slammed" to try to avoid some of the other modern meanings, like being slammed with work.) [0] https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=slams&year_sta... |
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Could be, this is when social media was taking off and people chasing "viral" moments started to become a thing I guess.
I agree the difference is somewhat contextually nuanced, I had to check the usage of "slammed" as I know it to confirm my understood usage is a thing.