The CFO at my old company said "irregardless", and in his line of work, he said it in front of a lot of pretty well educated people. And he said it a lot.
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
The CFO at my old company said "irregardless", and in his line of work, he said it in front of a lot of pretty well educated people. And he said it a lot.
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
Didn't Webster give up and add irregardless making it all a mute point?
The CFO at my old company said "irregardless", and in his line of work, he said it in front of a lot of pretty well educated people. And he said it a lot.
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
The A and B students work for the C and D students.
The CFO at my old company said "irregardless", and in his line of work, he said it in front of a lot of pretty well educated people. And he said it a lot.
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
Didn't Webster give up and add irregardless making it all a mute point?
Supposably.
For all intensive purposes, it was bound to happen sometimes.
The CFO at my old company said "irregardless", and in his line of work, he said it in front of a lot of pretty well educated people. And he said it a lot.
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
Didn't Webster give up and add irregardless making it all a mute point?
From Webster:
Is irregardless a word?: Usage Guide Irregardless was popularized in dialectal American speech in the early 20th century. Its increasingly widespread spoken use called it to the attention of usage commentators as early as 1927. The most frequently repeated remark about it is that "there is no such word." There is such a word, however. It is still used primarily in speech, although it can be found from time to time in edited prose. Its reputation has not risen over the years, and it is still a long way from general acceptance.
I think they got that last part wrong. It gets used a lot. Irregardless, once Webster says a word is a word, then it's a fucking word.
The CFO at my old company said "irregardless", and in his line of work, he said it in front of a lot of pretty well educated people. And he said it a lot.
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
The A and B students work for the C and D students.
The CFO at my old company said "irregardless", and in his line of work, he said it in front of a lot of pretty well educated people. And he said it a lot.
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
The A and B students work for the C and D students.
HTH
There is some truth to that saying.
A whole helluva lot. I learned it more on the side business I fell into than my career. No accreditation or engineering certifications. I'm just a normal dude who knows things but get big motor jobs from all over the world.
The CFO at my old company said "irregardless", and in his line of work, he said it in front of a lot of pretty well educated people. And he said it a lot.
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
Irregardless, he who has the gold makes the rules.
Comments
But, he's retired with millions in the bank and golfing like a mother fucker. So, there's that.
HTH
For all intensive purposes, it was bound to happen sometimes.
Is irregardless a word?: Usage Guide
Irregardless was popularized in dialectal American speech in the early 20th century. Its increasingly widespread spoken use called it to the attention of usage commentators as early as 1927. The most frequently repeated remark about it is that "there is no such word." There is such a word, however. It is still used primarily in speech, although it can be found from time to time in edited prose. Its reputation has not risen over the years, and it is still a long way from general acceptance.
I think they got that last part wrong. It gets used a lot. Irregardless, once Webster says a word is a word, then it's a fucking word.
Word.
Is what my father in law always says.
That’s pretty cool
@Throbber, Amiright?!!