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Pedants' corner

can 'gift' be a verb?

25 replies

MrsAtticus · 11/06/2014 19:14

I've noticed on my local freecycle, people are writing emails saying they have e.g. 'a sofa to gift'. This really annoys me. Is it a valid use of the word gift? I am thinking it's either correct and old fashioned and being brought back into common usage (in which case I'll endeavor not to be annoyed anymore) OR people are being stupid Hmm

OP posts:
ouryve · 11/06/2014 19:22

I think gifting someone something might be more usual in American usage, but is one of those terms that's catching on over here.

MrsAtticus · 11/06/2014 20:07

Oh I see.

OP posts:
StealthPolarBear · 11/06/2014 20:11

Along with "not in my gift" which is a flowery way of saying "can't"

MrsAtticus · 11/06/2014 20:30

Never heard that one!

OP posts:
AuntieStella · 11/06/2014 20:59

OED has first recorded use as a verb in 1608.

And I know it was in ordinary use from at least the 1980s.

Lottiegal · 14/06/2014 21:47

This makes me mad too and am hearing it everywhere Angry

KatieKaye · 14/06/2014 21:49

"to gift" is not uncommon in legal documents and is well-established as a verb.

lougle · 14/06/2014 21:52

Definitely a verb.

SanityClause · 14/06/2014 21:52

In English, all nouns can be verbed.

StealthPolarBear · 14/06/2014 22:34

Really? What about carrot?

Messygirl · 14/06/2014 22:35

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

StealthPolarBear · 14/06/2014 22:36

I gift you...
I carrot you..
Shock rude

springlamb · 14/06/2014 22:37

Doesn't the verb 'to carrot' refer to the act of home dyeing one sister's hair?
Sorry, as you were...

StealthPolarBear · 14/06/2014 22:38

:o

springlamb · 14/06/2014 22:43

My deepest apologies, i broccolied you quite by mistake.

Draw your own conclusions. I really had best to retire to bed, I have brain wobble.

puzzlepiecebehindthecouch · 14/06/2014 22:43

I have heard 'to gift' quite often in Indian English....

And I quite like the idea of 'to carrot' as a synonym for 'to bribe', perhaps one for desperate parents, eg 'I'm carroting the DCs with the promise of an ice cream if they behave in the supermarket' Smile

StealthPolarBear · 14/06/2014 22:46

Often I can just be walking along minding my own business when all of a sudden I get asparagused by a passer by

springlamb · 14/06/2014 22:53

What a night, I laughed so much I tomatoed myself. Then Alice strawberried up the kerb and fractured her marrow.

I shall arise now and take myself to bed. This is silly.

Messygirl · 14/06/2014 23:17

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

StealthPolarBear · 16/06/2014 12:26

:o

now parsnip off, I'm trying to work

NigellasDealer · 16/06/2014 12:29

but can be verbs be nouned?

actually the flexibility of being able to turn nouns into verbs is one of the English language's greatest strengths as an international language.

You have been mangoed

StealthPolarBear · 19/06/2014 19:35

I still want to know how all nouns can be a verb

Elsiequadrille · 19/06/2014 19:37

New, no. Overused, yes.

SanityClause · 19/06/2014 19:40

If you not stop going on about it, Stealth, I'll carrot you up the nose!

StealthPolarBear · 19/06/2014 19:44

Ill fennel you, right where it hurts

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