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AllaN01Bear

(28,617 posts)
Fri Dec 19, 2025, 01:24 PM Dec 19

gramer cops and other interesed parties . a question if i may?

ive noticed in the last 30 or so years , there has been in popular use the word extention able .
example : access to the apartments are some what bikeABLE , or someone is on my punchABLEs list , or that computer is upgradeABLE . is this a legit extenision ? thanks in advance .

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gramer cops and other interesed parties . a question if i may? (Original Post) AllaN01Bear Dec 19 OP
i'd call it a "suffix" rampartd Dec 19 #1
thanks . i just remembered that term. AllaN01Bear Dec 19 #3
The one that has made me groan is the addition of "doable" to the popular lexicon. Mister Ed Dec 19 #2
aggreed AllaN01Bear Dec 19 #4
it's a perfectly cromulent word! ret5hd Dec 19 #5
Lol, your post is really cromulent. 👍 Dave Bowman Dec 19 #6
hehe AllaN01Bear Dec 19 #7
Indubitably! Blues Heron Dec 19 #8
this discussion is justaprogressive Dec 19 #9
Fwiw, snot Dec 19 #10

Mister Ed

(6,812 posts)
2. The one that has made me groan is the addition of "doable" to the popular lexicon.
Fri Dec 19, 2025, 01:36 PM
Dec 19

If something can be done, then it's "doable", right? I guess the word "feasible" eluded too many people.

snot

(11,523 posts)
10. Fwiw,
Fri Dec 19, 2025, 05:58 PM
Dec 19

my personal pet peeve is using preventative for preventive, orientate for orient, etc. – i.e., adding or substituting a syllable in order to turn the noun form of a verb back into a longer (and to me, more officious-sounding) form of the same verb (orient –> orientation –> orientate; prevent –> prevention –> preventative).

So "he took preventive measures" becomes "he took preventative measures," and
"she glanced at the map to orient herself" becomes "she glanced at the map to orientate herself."

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