COMMONLY MISUSED WORDS IN ENGLISH
Some words are commonly misused. Learners should see that they understand the correct meaning of each. The aim of every word is to convey a thought.
The following list contains commonly misused words:
Power is the Word
- Aggravate means to increase, to make heavier, e.g. The pain was aggravated instead of alleviated.
The use of aggravate (= to annoy or tease) is purely conversational (informal). - Due to. There is no such compound preposition. "The music festival was postponed due to the heavy rains". This is not good English; the idiomatic construction should be: "owing to." "Due to" is correctly used in: "Her failure to achieve a matriculation exemption was purely due to negligence." And in, "Her failure, due to negligence, was inexcusable."
- Unique does not mean 'wonderful'. It does mean 'without parallel.' Nothing can be rather, or very or comparatively unique.
- Quite should, strictly, be used only in the sense of 'perfectly,' 'completely,' e.g.: "He is quite innocent." Colloquially (conversationally, informal) quite is used as an adjective or as an equivalent to 'rather,' e.g.: "Quite a crowd collected." "The pudding was quite nice."
- Mutual. Anything that is mutual can exist between two. There is a mutual friendship between Chelsea and Oliver when each has a friendly feeling for the other; Chelsea and Oliver cannot have a mutual friend in Cooper. Cooper is a friend who is common to Chelsea and Oliver.
- Effect. "The cold weather has an effect on her previously broken leg"
- Affect. To produce an effect, e.g. "The cold weather affected the crops." To act on or to move, move the feeling of, "The music affected him deeply."
- Transpire means 'to leak out,' e.g. Budget secrets must not be allowed to transpire. Transpireis often wrongly used in the sense of 'happen.'
- Literally should be used with its original meaning of 'true to the letter.' We can say: "She interpreted the order literally" or "this is literally true"; but it is ridiculous to say: "His clever acting literally brought down the house."
- Chronic does not mean bad. It does mean lasting (of sickness), We speak of heart failure as a chronic condition.
- Individual was originally an adjective, and when used as a noun should mean one as contrasted with a number, e.g. He was one individual in the crowd. The word is sometimes wrongly used in a sneering sense, as "that individual with the big nose". Rather say "man."
- To criticize means to judge, not merely to find fault.
Image credit - Accept. To accept an apology or an invitation. Accept means to agree on something.
- Except. "She would travel more, except for a lack of money" or "Everybody agreed to have a meeting on said date, except Iain."
How many words can you add to the list?
Source: J Rooz; Review Center: Published on Jun 27, 2014
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This is awesome! Great research.
Thank you!
I think that it happens at a world level in different languages. Concepts or terms are always confused. I think culture also influences this topic a bit.
I must often look up a word to make sure I am using it in the right context. Thank you for your reply.
I teach english in Spain and this list in accurate - sometimes it frustrates me no matter how I explain things some people just dont understand certain language concepts
Language is so beautiful, but people are taking it for granted. Thank you for your reply.
I agree. I am trying to learn Spanish but it is difficult! Learning slowly but now I can see why people struggle to learn new languages!
Weldone for time in creating these educating post. You deserve my upvote for this
Thank you!