Community Corner
10 Words and Phrases That Should Be Banished In 2015
In the "cra-cra" world of linguistic evolution, the faculty and staff of a Michigan university want to banish a few phrases into extinction.

The faculty and staff at Lake Superior State University have been compiling a list of words to be banished since 1976. (Facebook photo)
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By Beth Dalbey
Find out what's happening in Limerick-Royersford-Spring Cityfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Saving the Queenโs English from further bastardization, a Michigan university has once again offered its list of words and phrases we just shouldnโt say.
Ever.
Find out what's happening in Limerick-Royersford-Spring Cityfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
One of the top submissions on Lake Superior State Universityโs 40th Annual List of Words Banished from the Queenโs English for Mis-Use, Over-Use and General Uselessness is the word โbae,โ text shorthand for โbefore anyone elseโ that has wormed its way into spoken conversation โ annoyingly so, it seems.
โHow stupid! Stop calling your boyfriend โbae,โ โ Ervie Dunagan of Manheim, PA, said in her submission for the 2014 list, which will become part of an archive of more than 800 words that have been suggested for banishment since former LSSU public relations director started the list of words that annoyed him and his friends.
The tradition started by the late W.T. Rabe, who put together the first list of words people love to hate at a New Yearโs Eve party in 1975, has been continued by LSSU faculty and staff. The list, first published on jan. 1, 1976, is based entirely upon nominations from around the world.
If โbaeโ is a too-cute way to refer to your boyfriend, donโt even think about using it to refer to ramen noodles, says S. Thoms of Sault Ste. Marie, MI. She wins the understatement-of-the-year award with her comment:
โItโs overused.โ
Misuse of the word to describe the college dorm food staple aside, Thoms offered this: โIf I was putting someone โbefore anything else,โ I would respect them enough to use their name.โ โ
Tell Us:
- What words do you never want to hear again?
And if by bae, you really mean โbabe,โ take the extra time โ which is no time at all โ to add another consonant, k?
โIโd rather be called โbabeโ than โbaeโ any day,โ said Alexsis Outwater of Bronson, MI.
Flush the Polar Vortex
Another phrase we should all forget we ever heard is โpolar vortex.โ The phrase got a blizzard of nominations criticizing its use as an overly sensationalized, fright-inducing and poorly chosen synonym for what used to be called winter.
โWhat happened to โcold snapโ?โ Trevor Fenton of Edinburgh, UK, panned. โNot descriptive enough?โ
News Flash: Everybodyโs a Foodie
Michiganders had a strong presence in a chorus of people wanting us to un-hear the word โfoodie.โ
โItโs ridiculous. Do we call people who like wine โwiniesโ or beer lovers โbeeriesโ?โ asked Randall Chamberlain of Traverse City.
โ โSomeone who enjoys foodโ applies to everyone on Earth. Whatโs next? โOh, Iโm an airie; I just love to breathe.โ โCould we do it at 11, instead? Iโm kind of a sleepie.โ โ said Andy Poe of Marquette.
And Steve Szilagyi of Mason added this:
โIโve heard of cooks and chefs, and gourmets and gourmands, but what the heck is a โfoodieโ? A person who likes food? A person who eats food? A person who knows what food is? Sounds like โfoodieโ is a synonym for โeverybody.โ Foodies around the world agree; letโs banish this term.โ
Here are some other words you just shouldnโt say in 2015:
Cra-Cra
Just stop it. Itโs baby-talk for โcrazy.โ Use your adult voices and show some compassion for mentally ill people. Patch editorial comment aside, Steve Kaufman of Houston, TX, said this:
โIโve only heard it twice and already know by the end of the year Iโll want to scream.โ
Swag
No one even knows what this means anymore.
โThe word โswagโ has become a shapeless, meaningless word used in various forms (such as โswaggyโ) but with no real depth,โ said Bailey Anderson of Washington, IA.
Curate/Curated
โA pretentious way of saying โselected.โ Itโs enormously overused.โ said Kristi Hoerauf of San Francisco, whose comment we curated for the sake of this story.
Hack
โSuddenly things that once would have been called โtipsโ are now being called โhacks,โโ Sharla Hulsey of Sac City, IA, said. โIt canโt be because the one word is shorter or easier to say; and the actual accepted meanings of โhackโ have nothing to do with suggestions for doing tasks better or more efficiently โ quite the opposite, really.โ
Skill Set
โA skill is a skill โ that is it. Phrases such as โI have the skill set to do that properlyโ or anything resembling that phrase, shows the speaker is seriously lacking skills in the art of conversation,โ Stephanie Hamm-Wieczkiewicz of Litfield Park, AZ, said. โPlease try this, โI have the skill ... Do you have the skills ... This requires certain skills ... He is very skilled ... That was a skillful maneuve r... See? No need for a skill set.โ
Enhanced Interrogation
โA shameful euphemism for torture,โ said David Bristol of Byron Center, MI.
-Nation
โAlthough a devout Wisconsin sports fan, I do not belong to Packer-Nation, Badger-Nation, Phoenix-Nation, or Brewer-Nation. Further, I am not aware of any team or mascot that has the carrying capacity to be a nation,โ said Kelly Frawley of Waunakee, WI.
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