| ▲ | tux3 an hour ago | |
That's ironic, because the "no end" form was already a relatively new idiom. But "to no end" has already overtaken it in terms of popularity. Of course I meant the word "ironic" like I mean the word "literally"; which is to say, figuratively. Being a prescriptivist creates no end of everyday pains. Language just won't conform. | ||
| ▲ | hyperhello an hour ago | parent [-] | |
The thing is that it’s always used in “annoy” or “frustrate” because they mistake the response as sympathetic annoyance or empathic frustration when it’s really just their misuse of language. I don’t want them to be responsible for their miscommunication in the future! | ||