I'm not sure I count "literally" as an antagonym or contradictonym -- I think it's just misused.
For my own rant on this particular subject, see this article on my website.
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I'm not sure I count "literally" as an antagonym or contradictonym -- I think it's just misused.
For my own rant on this particular subject, see this article on my website.
I have read it and I believe I understand what you mean...
By the way, the sentences at the end of your article sound really strange :). Would someone really say them? I mean, in the meaning of "figuratively".
Could you just explain the coloured text, please?
Quote:
Many people die of laughter. Figuratively. A much smaller number of people literally die laughing: unusual but not unheard of. But there is no record of anyone ever having literally laughed their heads off — that would have made headline news. (Although, on consideration, I suppose it might already have made headline news in the National Enquirer.)
Yes, those sayings are quite common idioms. For example, "to keep one's eyes peeled" means to be very observant -- "We're looking for Bill the Burglar of Brixton, so keep your eyes peeled and if you see him, arrest him on sight."
The National Enquirer is an American tabloid newspaper which sometimes carries stories that are quite simply untrue (and it has got into a lot of legal trouble because of this). Today it concentrates mostly on stories about celebrities, but in former times it carried stories about UFOs, the Loch Ness Monster and other strange things.
I agree with your piece where you say that people intend it to be an intesifier. There are some strange uses floating around at the moment, like this one and I also like people using 'to coin a phrase' as a way of introducing a cliche.