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Reply to: Please revert

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Previously on "Please revert"

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  • cailin maith
    replied
    Originally posted by Jubber View Post
    Yep - my other half is in the legal profession - correspondence from solicitors is full of it - but I've never heard her or any of her colleagues use it when speaking - I'll ask her.
    Same, same - wouldn't use it verbally but it is commonly used.

    Leave a comment:


  • cailin maith
    replied
    Originally posted by aardvark View Post
    Do you get a lot of correspondence from solicitors?
    Actually, yes.

    Leave a comment:


  • Jubber
    replied
    Originally posted by cailin maith View Post
    I don't think it is just a "Bob-ism" - I see it a lot on correspondance from Solicitors and Accountants. And have done for many years.

    eg - I will revert back to you in due course.
    Yep - my other half is in the legal profession - correspondence from solicitors is full of it - but I've never heard her or any of her colleagues use it when speaking - I'll ask her.

    Leave a comment:


  • mudskipper
    replied
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/06/ma...ge-t.html?_r=0

    Sticklers who are not already up in arms about this change in meaning will surely bristle at the redundancy of the second sentence: why revert back when you can simply revert?


    As Alison Waters, a lexicographer at Oxford University Press, told The Indian Express, revert in the sense of "reply" is one of eight contributions from Indian English included in the latest batch of OALD additions.
    Guess we're stuck with it. I wonder what the other seven are...?

    Leave a comment:


  • aardvark
    replied
    Originally posted by cailin maith View Post
    I don't think it is just a "Bob-ism" - I see it a lot on correspondance from Solicitors and Accountants. And have done for many years.

    eg - I will revert back to you in due course.
    Do you get a lot of correspondence from solicitors?

    Interesting - I thought it was a bobism that had wriggled its way into common parlance, but maybe revert can mean reply/respond. Revert back has got to be wrong though, shirley?

    Leave a comment:


  • mudskipper
    replied
    It's getting worse.

    In a meeting this week, the PM not only used the term no fewer than three times, but added a 'back' to it. :tautology

    "Waiting for x to revert back".

    I bit my tongue.

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    I'm doing the needful doings.
    Ease and squeeze.

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by Cenobite View Post
    There are two languages things that really kill me at the moment.

    Firstly, "I am liking this" instead of "I like this".

    Second, people going on about "banter".
    I'm loving that.

    Leave a comment:


  • Cenobite
    replied
    There are two languages things that really kill me at the moment.

    Firstly, "I am liking this" instead of "I like this".

    Second, people going on about "banter".

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by cailin maith View Post
    I don't think it is just a "Bob-ism" - I see it a lot on correspondance from Solicitors and Accountants. And have done for many years.

    eg - I will revert back to you in due course.
    They outsourced document production.

    HTH

    Leave a comment:


  • cailin maith
    replied
    I don't think it is just a "Bob-ism" - I see it a lot on correspondance from Solicitors and Accountants. And have done for many years.

    eg - I will revert back to you in due course.

    Leave a comment:


  • CheeseSlice
    replied
    Originally posted by Alias View Post
    The two Bobisms that get me to everytime I hear them around ClientCo are:

    "I'll just be back" - to mean "I'll be right back"
    "Just wait and watch" - to mean "Just wait and see"

    *Sigh*
    I once heard "when can I start the upgradation?"

    Leave a comment:


  • mudskipper
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    Indeed.



    Assuming that all of the above was intentional.
    My money's on at least one non intentional error.

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    One fella I worked with (absolute B.O.D.S. genius) used to say "Why because" when explaining things.

    "We should stage the data, why because it gives us many benefits" ....

    Again, charming.

    Leave a comment:


  • Alias
    replied
    Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View Post
    Reading this today I thought, why not reply with "Sure, I’ll set my biological clock to regress evolutionarily to my original primitive hydrocarbon state at 1 p.m. today."
    The two Bobisms that get me to everytime I hear them around ClientCo are:

    "I'll just be back" - to mean "I'll be right back"
    "Just wait and watch" - to mean "Just wait and see"

    *Sigh*

    Leave a comment:

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