Welp, that's enough twitter for today.
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Interesting. But “please stop using” does not equal “ban.” What am I missing?
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I don’t know if I would use the word ban to describe these search results. There is a big difference between banning (making it illegal) and influencing (trying to convince). I can choose to ignore the latter.
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Let me try: Stop using the words “stop using the word” There, I’m in! :-)
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https://mobile.twitter.com/search?q=%22stop%20using%20the%20expression …”&src=typed_query&f=live
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The only one I saw in the first 40 results that wasn't referring to a specific context or broad misuse of an existing word was someone insisting that "boomer" is a slur.
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An interesting search, though the first search result is a joke tweet which says "I can't stop using the word vibe seriously", the second result is a criticism of word "surprised" in a specific context, the third is an objection to a particular person's use of the word, etc.
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To be clear, I do like this search as an exercise, and it's interesting to see what words people object to. But it looks like there's a lot more nuance (even on Twitter!) in tweets using the phrase "stop using the word" than I would have expected - I'm pleasantly surprised!
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I think people should stop telling people what to do. ;)
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I went through a phase where I tried to get people to stop saying “object-oriented.”
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Orient you keen?
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