My most hated:
- lose/loose
- vicious/viscous
- chocking/choking
And segueway or whatever permutation is always good for a laugh. I don't stumble across prostate/prostrate as often as I stumble across mischaracterising prostate physiology.
Jayne ,'Safe'
[NAFDA]. This is where we talk about the CW series Supernatural! Anything that's aired in the US on TV (including promos) is fair game. No spoilers though — if you post one by accident, an admin will delete it.
My most hated:
And segueway or whatever permutation is always good for a laugh. I don't stumble across prostate/prostrate as often as I stumble across mischaracterising prostate physiology.
In sink instead of in sync. At least it isn't N'SYNC.
But Sam and Dean meeting N'SYNC would be an AWESOME story!
I think lose/loose is one of my biggest peeves, mostly because if you pronounce the words properly, you can hear the difference, which you can't with you're/your or their/there.
I will admit that I didn't know how to spell segue for a really long time.
I did actually run across a story that confused prostrate/supine, but that was such a breath of fresh air, I couldn't even be mad at her.
As far as segue goes, it's an argument I've had more than once. Those arguments are so much simpler in the days of the red squiggly. And sources like Wordnik take it to an even higher level.
Faze/phase drives me nuts.
I think so few people have been taught the word "faze" that, well, I'm less than fazed by it.
Oh, oh...I recently bumped into confusion between passed and past. Arrrggg.
There seems like way more Brits writing SPN fic in the past 6-8 months. As in people putting foreign words into Winchester mouths.
I had a pissy fit this morning about Sarah Blake. The term "fridging" loses meaning if you apply it to her and not Jenny Klein. You're about at "Mary Sue" levels of meaninglessness--basically "that thing in the narrative with a woman that bothered me" except Mary Sues decently often survive (especially these days, with the watered down terminology).
That wasn't fridging, especially given the circumstances.