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AIBU?

I'm prepared to be flamed but I get very irritated by people referring to "the floor" when they mean the ground.

83 replies

Salmotrutta · 02/03/2017 21:59

Go on.

Roast me.

I don't care.

I hear people referring to "the floor" all the blooming time when they mean "the ground".

For example:- "I was walking along the road and I dropped my purse on the floor

No you didn't - you dropped it on the ground.

Yes, I know I'm being horrible but I can't help it.


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Sistermister · 02/03/2017 22:01

Yabu for posting in AIBU. There's a pedants corner y'know 😜

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Salmotrutta · 02/03/2017 22:01

Yeah.

I know... 😯😯

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MrsTerryPratchett · 02/03/2017 22:02

DH says, "I'm going to bed" when he's already in bed and means, "I'm going to sleep". I correct him every time because I'm a total arsehole.

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Gobbolinothewitchscat · 02/03/2017 22:04

salmo - are you Scottish? I am but live in England. I hear this floor thing all the time down here but never in Scotland. Totally annoying. A floor is in a house. Not outside!

And then everyone looks at me weirdly when I ask where they stay!

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derxa · 02/03/2017 22:07

Yes very annoying. I'm Scottish too. I also say, 'I'm going to my bed'. We Scots like to be specific. Grin

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BestZebbie · 02/03/2017 22:09

To me the ground is unsurfaced - so in a field or a dirt path - whereas a floor is a man-made surface. So inside a building there is a floor, but a pavement is a floor too.

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eddiemairswife · 02/03/2017 22:11

Is this 'floor' thing regional? I'm originally from London, but now live in the Midlands and 'floor' is very common here.

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Gobbolinothewitchscat · 02/03/2017 22:12

Yes derxa - I also like to say I'm off to "the Aldi" or "the Sainsburys"

At least I've taught DH what the big light is now

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BestZebbie · 02/03/2017 22:12

Thinking about this further, an ice-rink is a floor (but a frozen pond very definitely isn't!), and a road is a different category of "road" - so I think the definition is to do with being man-made but also intended for pedestrian use.

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DJBaggySmalls · 02/03/2017 22:14

BestZebbie but a floor is indoors, not outdoors. Google 'flooring' and be prepared to have your mind blown.

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HerRoyalNotness · 02/03/2017 22:14

DH says this, he's northern. Grinds my gears it does. He also says mud for any kind of ground that isn't paved over, i.e. Dirt. That also pisses me off.

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Redcrayons · 02/03/2017 22:15

So ground = outside and floor = inside? Never thought about the difference before.
I have a Scottish friend who says 'going to my bed'. I like the exactness of it.

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rainbowunicorn · 02/03/2017 22:16

yes this is one of my pet hates

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MrsTerryPratchett · 02/03/2017 22:17

DH also used to say, "irregardless"

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derxa · 02/03/2017 22:18

"irregardless" Grin

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forfucksakenet · 02/03/2017 22:19

Smile didn't realise 'going to my bed' wasn't the norm! How funny. I say 'through the house' when I mean the room next door. For example, here take that through the house to dad Smile

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libertydoddle · 02/03/2017 22:20

A floor is the surface you stand on inside a building or in something like a bus. It is not a hard surface on which you stand outdoors. Calling the footpath or the road 'the floor' is just wrong.

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HainaultViaNewburyPark · 02/03/2017 22:21

The phrase I hate the most is:
"Can I ask you a question?"

You already did...

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Salmotrutta · 02/03/2017 22:22

Gobbolino - yes I'm Scottish!

I don't know if it's cultural/regional but it's bloody irritating.

A floor is an internal surface!!

Angry

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Salmotrutta · 02/03/2017 22:23

irregardless???

What??

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MrsTerryPratchett · 02/03/2017 22:23

He is Canadian. But still.

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SmileEachDay · 02/03/2017 22:24

How do you feel about pelvic floor Salmo?

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Catzpyjamas · 02/03/2017 22:25

Oh good, I'm so glad someone else is annoyed by this. Floors are inside buildings! Anything else is the ground.

Glad we got that sorted, Salmotrutta. Now I'm off to my bed.

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ItsAllGoingToBeFine · 02/03/2017 22:26

I sometimes say floor for any hard unnatural surface...

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PunjanaTea · 02/03/2017 22:26

I have never heard anyone call the ground outside the floor and I have lived in many parts of the UK.

DH calls the ceiling the roof though, so we can add that to the list of annoying things people say that are just wrong.

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