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Pedants' corner

Horrible and terrible

6 replies

paxillin · 16/06/2017 11:24

Let me start this by saying English isn't my mother tongue. I have a question for the wonderful guardians of the English language.

Horrible is a bad thing, and horrific is even worse. Why is terrible a bad thing, but terrific is a really good one? How did that come about? Are there more examples of this?

OP posts:
Ohyesiam · 16/06/2017 12:08

Because English is illogical, made to of lots of other languages, and doesn't do rules.

There are probably lots of other example of this, but I don't notice then as English is my first language.

Enb76 · 16/06/2017 12:14

Terrific literally means causing terror, the word usage has changed to mean very great (as in size). Lot of word usage in English has changed to come to mean the opposite of what it originally meant.

Eolian · 16/06/2017 12:20

Because usage of words shifts over the centuries.

I imagine 'terrific' went 'terror-inspiring' > 'awe-inspiring'> 'fantastic'.

Indeed, 'fantastic' itself probably shifted too. 'fantasy-like' > 'extraordinary' > 'extraordinarily good'.

But word meanings don't shift in a predictable or logical way. That's the nature of language. I expect this happens in all languages.

paxillin · 16/06/2017 12:26

That article mentioned "awful" originally meaning "awe inspiring".

OP posts:
steppemum · 16/06/2017 12:35

yes awful means literally full of awe, so it is still correct usage to use it that way, although most people would think you meant bad.

terrific is quite recent, in 1930's kids would be told off for using it as slang, in a similar way to kids today saying wicked or sick to mean something is great.

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