4 pointsby bf9d41390621 hours ago4 comments
  • cestith21 hours ago
    This I think is one of the many wrongs perpetrated by “business speak”. People say “invite” for “invitation”, then instead of using “invite” as a verb they say they “sent an invite”. They don’t say “installation” and say rather “install” as a noun. They say silly trite things like “circle back”. They load up conversations with sports metaphors and military jargon. A layoff or staff reduction is now a “reduction in force”. A couple of decades ago it might have been known instead as “resizing”. “Taking point” on a project has become as common or more common than “leading” it. I think you’ll also find more “utilization” in use than “usage” - which in some contexts has a slightly different connotation but usually the shorter word will work just fine.
    • baubino12 hours ago
      > People say “invite” for “invitation”, then instead of using “invite” as a verb they say they “sent an invite”.

      That happened with the onset of digital invitations, like evite, in the late 90s/early 2000s. I remember it vividly because I staunchly refused to use “invite” in place of “invitation.” I wonder how many other language shifts are also tech related.

  • JohnFen20 hours ago
    In the US, anyway, using those words instead of "using" has been basically standard for a whole lot longer than 10 years in the business world. My memory is that it started in earnest in the '90s, although it's possible it was earlier.

    It's just people trying to sound smarter than they are.

    • bediger400020 hours ago
      Agree. This started in the 90s. Except for some technical instances (queueing theory for one), "utilize" is a mark of trying to sound smart. It's a propaganda word.
  • JohnFen13 hours ago
    Also, interestingly enough, "use" and "utilize" are not exactly synonyms, even though they're usually used as if they were.

    Technically, "use" means to use something for its given purpose, and "utilize" is a specific kind of using. It means "making the most effective use of something, often in a manner not initially intended."

  • leephillips20 hours ago
    It’s just transient fashion, driven by people who don’t read books. In another few years the same type of people might be using “employ” or something instead of “utilize”, or returning to “use”.

    If you want your English to be good, try to spend more time with books, and less time with anything written after about 1960. This (excellent, and free) advice applies to native speakers as well as those enjoying English as a second (or third, etc.) language.