PeaceBang
The manic mind of the minister -- Auntie Mame Meets Cotton Mather. Blogging about Unitarian Universalism, UU Christian spiritual practice, occasional cultural and political ravings, and the inner life of ministry. PeaceBang is the alter ego of a small town pastor serving an historic New England Unitarian Universalist congregation.
Verbifying Perfectly Innocent Nouns
October 27, 2006 on 1:26 am | In Random Rant | The next time I hear someone use the word “popcorn” as a verb, I’m going to shout an obscenity.
If you don’t know what I’m talking about, then you haven’t ever had to “popcorn,” and I’m envious of your innocence.
What noun, when used as a verb, causes your blood pressure to rise? I know there are some I’m forgetting.
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Oh PeaceBang… I am without a clue. Popcorn as a verb? Help!
Mags
Comment by Magdalene6127 — October 27, 2006 #
Mag, it’s this thing everyone’s using at workshop and conferences where they want to get people to respond to a question (typically, “How was this experience for you?”) really quickly, and in no particular order. So they’ll say, “Let’s POPCORN some of our experiences for the next few minutes.”
I just sit there cringing.
Comment by PeaceBang — October 27, 2006 #
See, I alsways approach that situation as “So, let’s discuss [topic] and [subtobic]. We can just go around popcorn style until anyone that wants to weigh in has done so.”
Comment by Donald O'Bloggin — October 27, 2006 #
Consultant-speak can be wincingly fascinating. I record morsels, and “popcorn” as a verb is going on the list!
I work with a group that frequently hears unsolicited proposals from consultants (not as exciting as that may sound). Maybe we’ll start a pool with the winner being the first person to hear “popcorn” used in this way – I’m sure it’s coming, it’s just too good!
About fifteen years ago “noodle” was being used similarly, in place of “consider”: “Let’s noodle that idea and interface about it again in the morning.” Ewww!
Comment by powderblue — October 27, 2006 #
I also hate nounifying: “What are your learnings?”
Comment by Philocrites — October 27, 2006 #
Yikes! I asked my 14 year old daughter at breakfast, and she said, “I dunno. Sounds like beating someone up? ‘Let’s popcorn that guy’?”
Mags
Comment by Magdalene6127 — October 27, 2006 #
I guess Episcopalians don’t popcorn, because that one was new to me. Yikes.
Comment by Elizabeth — October 27, 2006 #
By the way, Cambridge Friends Meeting in Massachusetts is known as the “popcorn” meeting by other Quakers, because for some reasons, those Cantabrugians are constitutionally unable to sit silently and wait on the Holy Spirit before rising to testify. They can only sit so long before offering their testimony, whether the Spirit has moved them or not. (Of course, it’s possible that the Spirit moves much more discernably and frequently in Cambridge than elsewhere, but it’s statistically improbable.)
Comment by fausto — October 27, 2006 #
The noun is impact, meaning a consequence or influence (as opposed to the unrelated sense of a physical collision). The correct corresponding verb is not impact (which does mean to physically collide), but affect.
It is also not effect, which means not to influence but to execute or cause (as in, “The meeting planners, devoid of any meaningful faith, effected an ill-considered change in GA worship”).
Comment by fausto — October 27, 2006 #
Just curious … isn’t this blog article title a self-referential example?
Aren’t you “verbifying” the noun “verb”?
On a more serious note, I’ve used “popcorn” as a verb on rare instances when facilitating Our Whole Lives workshops. This may be a “degradation” of English or just an example of English living and growing. I do find it useful because most folks know what I mean when I use it.
If this really is a hot-button issue for you, I would recommend that you ask that “no verbifying” be included in the group covenant for any workshop that you participate in.
As a group facilitator, I would want the participants to be comfortable and if “verbifying” makes you uncomfortable, we would need to know that.
My personal language pet peeve is the overuse of acronyms in Unitarian Universalist settings. Speaking as a 20 year+ military retiree and a civil servant working for the military, Unitarian Universalists are worse than the military when it comes to this. It confuses newcomers when we do this and makes us less welcoming to them.
Comment by Steve Caldwell — October 27, 2006 #
Today, any noun can be verbed.
Comment by bob — October 27, 2006 #
Access!
Caroline
(hi Mags, we know each other in another world where I don’t use a pseudonym - more on this when I have time to write… haven’t been in touch with you in a while, though I am all the time with our mutual friend the fabulous chaplain)(whom I turned on to Beauty Tips for Ministers, by the way) (PeaceBang, she’s a big fan)
Comment by Caroline Divine — October 27, 2006 #
Dialogue is the one that drives me crazy in meetings.
“Let’s dialogue on that idea…”
arrrrrrrrgh.
Comment by Jess — October 27, 2006 #
Back in the early 1980s, I was wigged out by the use of “to fantasy” as opposed to “to fantasize.”
Mary Ann
Comment by Anonymous — October 27, 2006 #
?
Comment by Patt — October 27, 2006 #
But as a corporate pet peeve, the misuse of “myself” ranks up there. Constantly I read emails stating, “If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to Scott or myself.”
It’s me! A direct object! “Myself” is a reflexive pronoun. (And what the heck does “reach out” mean??) I buck convention and say, “Let me know if you have any questions.” Bah.
Comment by CK — October 28, 2006 #
I used to hear it called “popcorn prayer” in evangelical circles–pray as you’re ‘led.’ I hated it, because I never could *feel* god telling me when to pray. Guilt upon guilt upon guilt. Uck.
Comment by CK — October 28, 2006 #
How about the word ‘community.’
Rev.’s love using that word. Let’s go makes some community.
I think most people would like to be part of ‘a community.’ They don’t want to have some community. Wasn’t the old word ‘fellowship?’
Comment by Sun Warrior — October 28, 2006 #
Ooh, yes, “to impact” gets me almost as mad as “to access.” Ick. And THANKS for the “affect” and “effect” distinction. I keep correcting it on my students’ papers… Maybe they will leave college knowing the difference between the two!
By the way, even among Friends here in the Southland (I work at a Quaker- founded institution, which perhaps makes me a Quakapalian)the Cambridge Friends Meeting is known as the “popcorn meeting,” so word gets around! I knew about this already because I’m a Yankee (but, please note, not a Yankees fan!) and only moved here 15 months ago, and it was a hoot to find out that the reputation was a national one, yea even a multidenominational one, since here we have many shades and movements of Friends. I’ve had to learn Quaker acronyms (speaking of those UU acronyms) like FUM and FGC. We’ve got our share of acronyms in the Episcopal Church, though more difficult for visitors is probably the Episco-speak of the non-acronym form. (One of our cartoonists, Jay Sidebotham, makes fun of it in his calendars.) You know, narthex and thurifer and suffragan and crypt. See http://eny.dioceseny.org/0504/Humor6.html and then scroll down to the cartoon marked “The Bishop Arrives for Pentecost.” At least we laugh at ourselves.
Cheers from the rainy Southeast, and a deep Zen bow to the arbiters of linguistic usage. PB, have fun on the Cape. I’m envious.
Comment by Caroline Divine — October 28, 2006 #
CK, that makes me particularly nuts too!
Comment by PeaceBang — October 29, 2006 #
I love your blog, Peacebang! I enjoy the posted comments, too!
I have heard of under-the-table meeting tic-tac-toe games where they have consultant-speak words (like popcorn, dialogue) laid out and when one is said you mark it off. When someone gets 3 in a row, the winner exclaims with the code word/phrase (Fabulous!, Whoo hoo - Synergize!, etc)
Comment by j.e. — November 7, 2006 #
You are not alone:
From the November/December issue of Mother Jones, “Adobe systems is fighting the use of “photoshop” as a verb. Instead it recommends “the image was enhances using Adobe(R) Photoshop(R) software.”
Comment by jinnis — January 1, 2007 #