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    1. HowlingBurd19 on

      Fun fact, the word “terrific” went through a linguistic process called “amelioration”, when over time a word’s meaning changes from negative/neutral to positive. Of course, it should also be known amelioration happens in all languages, too. Very cool.

    2. Urbansprint on

      As a kid I always thought Terrific was a bad. Think it was just a few years back I realized it wasn’t. Never spoke with someone who actually used it in their vernacular.

    3. And then “flammable” and “inflammable” mean the same thing somehow.

    4. RexTheSkibiriToilet on

      First I heard ‘terrific work ‘ from a professor in USA, I was like ‘is it that bad? Where did I mess up?’

    5. CobaltKiller27 on

      Terrible and Terrific both come from latin terrere “to fear”. Terrific slowly morphed to meaning extreme/powerful (terrific headache) terrible mostly kept a similar meaning. Horrible entered english earlier than horrific, ibilis ending meaning “able to” so “able to cause fear”. Horrific is just a slightly different ending “ficus” meaning “to make” or “to do”, so theyre a little more interchangeable, most of the time horrific is a little more extrem connotation than horrible.

    6. Slipsndslops on

      Completely off topic but this reminds me of the time I said “easy peasy lemon squeezy” to my Japanese lab partner and he thought I had said something extremely dirty to him. 

    7. Known-nwonK on

      Elves are wonderful. They provoke wonder.
      Elves are marvelous. They cause marvels.
      Elves are fantastic. They create fantasies.
      Elves are glamorous. They project [glamour](https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Glamour).
      Elves are enchanting. They weave enchantment.
      Elves are terrific. They beget terror.
      The thing about words is that meanings can twist just like a snake, and if you want to find snakes, look behind words that have changed their meaning.
      No one ever said elves are *nice*.
      Elves are *bad.*

    8. – Bien = Good
      – Mal = Bad
      – Mal = Good
      – Mal, es verdad = True, that’s True.

      Non argentineans ⚰️⚰️⚰️

    9. IWillDevourYourToes on

      I remember our English teacher explaining us “priceless” is actually a good thing and it doesn’t mean worthless

    10. ChrissWayne on

      I once got downvoted cause I pointed this out and asked if someone could explain why it’s not based on terrifying

    11. Most of the language have the “sick” word that means bad thing but in another context and often in youngster slang can mean “very cool”

    12. They’re definitely gonna have a “terrible, horrible, no-good, very bad day”

    13. emperorsyndrome on

      I think that in english “terrible” also means “good”.

      we totally use it like that in Greek.

    14. ShroomsHealYourSoul on

      Sick is bad and good

      Bad is bad and good

      Illness is bad illest is good

    15. That word gave me problems when learning English. As Spanish speaker I always thought that terrific was “terrorífico“

    16. Wizard35782 on

      English is such a bullshit language and I say that as a native English speaker

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