This is a pathetic take. Dictionaries aren’t rules, they’re guides on how words are used. If a word is commonly used one way, then the dictionary needs to reflect that.
And no, affect and effect will not be changed in the dictionary. People were using literally as an intensifier, which is why it got its new definition. Using effect instead of affect is just wrong, not semantic drift.
This doesn’t mean what you think it means.
That’s a lot of words. Too bad im not reading them
Sadly, dictionaries will likely edit their definitions one of these days.
This is a pathetic take. Dictionaries aren’t rules, they’re guides on how words are used. If a word is commonly used one way, then the dictionary needs to reflect that.
And no, affect and effect will not be changed in the dictionary. People were using literally as an intensifier, which is why it got its new definition. Using effect instead of affect is just wrong, not semantic drift.
To be fair, the era of precise spelling is relatively recent. It wasn’t that long ago that spelling was basically the phoenetic Wild West
Also got the conjunctive apostrophe in “that’s” but could not get it, or even capitalize the I, in “im”.
Ffs my autocorrect tried to not me do it just now!