The tailgate on Chumley has a 'boo-boo' - UNPRECENDENTED! |
How many times have you heard someone talk about how these times, ever since
the Covid-19 pandemic started, are "unprecedented?" They keep using that word,
but I don't think it means what they think it means.
Ok, so the Oxford dictionary says 'unprecedented' means 'never done or
known before.' So technically, we might be correct in saying this sort
of damage to the farm pickup is unprecedented. Well, actually it's not.
There have been a couple of other farm 'dings' because that is what
happens with a farm truck. By the way, I was not happy at all that this
happened. The how of it will be for another time.
Unprecedented stack of things in the Truck Barn... |
Ok, the stack of things to be cleaned or put away in the Truck Barn is
not something that had never happened before. BUT, I bet these specific
items have never been stacked or placed EXACTLY like this before. That
must mean it is unprecedented. Wow! I can make anything sound
impressive if I use that interpretation of the word.
Soup has never rolled around between this ladder and building before... |
Part of what I am getting at is that we all have a tendency to co-opt
words that are bigger or grander to try to make something sound more
impressive. 'Unprecedented' is just such a word. It's a longer word
with more sylla-bobbles - so if you use it, you must be intelligent,
right?
The chickens have never... oh, wait. They have. Never mind. |
The upshot of all of my belly-aching about a single word is that
'unprecedented' has been thrown around a good bit for several
years for all kinds of things. I notice that we seem willing to misuse
'unprecedented,' but we balk at the phrase 'without precedent.'
Folks... they are one and the same.
Case in point. "These are unprecedented times with the Covid-19 pandemic, quarantines, shelter-in-place, etc."
But, this was not without precedent. And many of the people that used
'unprecedented' for the current times would, in the same conversation,
refer to the 1918 flu epidemic. By default, they already knew that
there was a precedent. Huh? Perhaps we're using the word
'unprecedented' as an excuse for our failure not to look critically at
prior pandemics and learn from them? Hmmmmm.
This fence is falling down. Unprecedented - for this fence. |
So, here we are. It is true. The event of this particular fence
falling down is unprecedented. It has not fallen down before. But, I
am aware of many other fences that have fallen. Soup the cat has never
rolled around next to that ladder, so it is unprecedented for that
specific arrangement.
But, these all miss the point that 'unprecedented' implies a certain
enormity that is lost when we over-use it. Perhaps these ARE
exceptional times, but probably not unprecedented.
But, that fence... unprecedented, I tell you!
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This blog is a throwback Thursday blog that was originally posted in April of 2020. While most of us have moved on from the pandemic, we still seem to be overly found of the word "unprecedented."
And, just so you know. I edited the old blog a bit to update it a bit. Surely that must be unprecedented? No? I guess I'd better check the definition again.
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