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View Full Version : Phrases, metaphors and idioms that should be retired from literature forever...



megladon8
01-30-2014, 08:09 PM
Last year was one of my best reading years ever, having read 27 books between January and October. I know, it doesn't seem like much compared to many others here, but seeing as how I often go through very short reading bursts, this was a great accomplishment for me.

I read some fantastic books, as well as some real clunkers (some of which I didn't even finish - something I try not to ever do).

Through some of the worse books, I encountered many awful, cliché phrases that I wish would never be used again.

Let's share phrases we wish we could never see again!


"Lit up like the fourth of July."

"Six of one, half a dozen of the other."

"Laugh all the way to the bank."

Skitch
01-30-2014, 08:49 PM
"So at the end of the day..."

Dukefrukem
01-30-2014, 09:13 PM
"That being said..."

Sven
01-30-2014, 10:45 PM
Nothing deflates thoughtful, engaging discussion for me quicker than "It is what it is."

megladon8
01-30-2014, 10:47 PM
Nothing deflates thoughtful, engaging discussion for me quicker than "It is what it is."


Oh my god! Yes!

Sven
01-30-2014, 10:55 PM
I guess that one's more of a general irritant. Can't say I've seen it in literature.

In books, specifically fantasy books, I immediately check out when characters throw around idioms involving the fictional creatures, currencies, or calendars of their universe.

"...like dealing with traugs in Ourth when you have only a skosh of flikkits." [/close book]

D_Davis
01-30-2014, 11:03 PM
I can deal with that in small doses, but only in certain kinds of fantasy, like the heroic fantasy, and sword and sorcery. I mean, Conan wouldn't be Conan without that kind of stuff, and Robert E. Howard wrote as good as any author who ever lived. Same as Jack Vance, and the rest of the pulps.

megladon8
01-30-2014, 11:19 PM
I can deal with that in small doses, but only in certain kinds of fantasy, like the heroic fantasy, and sword and sorcery. I mean, Conan wouldn't be Conan without that kind of stuff, and Robert E. Howard wrote as good as any author who ever lived. Same as Jack Vance, and the rest of the pulps.


Speaking of Vance, I just ordered the complete "Tales of the Dying Earth" compendium. It'll be my intro to his work.

D_Davis
01-30-2014, 11:21 PM
Speaking of Vance, I just ordered the complete "Tales of the Dying Earth" compendium. It'll be my intro to his work.

The 2nd half is much better than the first.

I need to read more Vance.

megladon8
01-30-2014, 11:30 PM
I guess that one's more of a general irritant. Can't say I've seen it in literature.

In books, specifically fantasy books, I immediately check out when characters throw around idioms involving the fictional creatures, currencies, or calendars of their universe.

"...like dealing with traugs in Ourth when you have only a skosh of flikkits." [/close book]


When I was taking a college program for Script and Technical Writing, there was a guy who started an enormous war on the program's e-forum because he insisted that great writing was taking something mundane and just changing the words to fantasy/sci-fi lingo.

His example was something like, "Isn't the sentence 'Bob walked down the street.' much more interesting when written as 'Vorgath strolled through Minthrel's town square."

Everyone insisted that this was not a more interesting sentence, and he just wouldn't have it.

He's the same guy who insisted that a movie's quality is determined by how much money it makes.

He is probably a millionaire studio exec now.

Skitch
01-30-2014, 11:35 PM
Nothing deflates thoughtful, engaging discussion for me quicker than "It is what it is."
I have to physically restrain myself from immediately punching people who say that, and it seems like people who do say it every five minutes.

Skitch
01-31-2014, 12:06 AM
"Just sayin'."

Especially when people use it as the tag on a stupid statement, as though it is the nail in the coffin of the argument. JUST SAYIN'.

Dukefrukem
01-31-2014, 12:44 AM
"Honestly...."

Ezee E
01-31-2014, 12:45 AM
"Just sayin'."

Especially when people use it as the tag on a stupid statement, as though it is the nail in the coffin of the argument. JUST SAYIN'.

I usually do EXACTLY that on stupid statements, because the statement is so stupid.

Dead & Messed Up
01-31-2014, 01:40 AM
"What he didn't realize was he had ten minutes to live." End chapter.

Bwaaaaaaaaaaam.

number8
01-31-2014, 07:05 PM
Little did she know that her troubles had just begun.