documentate!!

crg langwidge at EROLS.COM
Sun Mar 27 00:42:45 UTC 2005


>From a lurker in Baltimore:

Are orientate, documentate, conversate, etc. becoming more common?

I hear them used more frequently now than I did several years ago.

Or perhaps they're actually words???

Christine Gray


>  "conversate" for "converse" (v.)

Isn't "conversate" slang? Since I was a teenager, this has been used in
the sense of "sweet-talk" v.

-Wilson Gray

> would be more comparable (20,000 supposed hits by naive Google).
> Anyway, many 'errors' or 'nonstandard variants' (of various types),
> even
> very common ones and even ones which have been in use for a long time,
> are
> excluded from the dictionaries. Any question of whether or not this is
> 'good' I'll leave to R. H. Fiske et al.
>
> -- Doug Wilson
>



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