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words 380x246 Caution: this post contains the words moist and pantiesThere are certain words that make me wince.  In fact wince is one of them. It just sounds so, er ghastly (another one that I can’t stand the sound of).  Followed closely by moist and  yeasty (not even necessarily in conjunction) and irregardless which is a word that my husband uses and I am sure isn’t even real.

I am also not very partial to the words slacks and blouse and I absolutely hate it when people say space when they are talking about anything other than having air around them or the solar system. I don’t love the word sink and would replace it with basin every time even if it was not correct and I would never ever utter the word hankie, I would rather wipe my nose on my sleeve. Honestly.

Unlike a lot of people I don’t have a problem with the word panties (although I know a lot of you  just dry retched just then) but it was the most common word we gave to female underwear in South Africa where I grew up, so it sounds natural and normal to me.

But there are a whole host of words that I can’t say in public, not because I can’t stand the sound of them,  but because nobody other than my immediate family would know what I was talking about – like smoosh is ice cream that has been softened, and leeanza is lasagna and lawt is water.  Long stories with rich histories that make the words sound perfectly normal around the family dinner table but quite insane to the bystander.

Johanna Gohmman wrote in a hilariously funny article in Salon recently:

When I was growing up, my family developed our own unique form of communication. This kind of makes sense, as we are the size of a small Sioux tribe — I have six brothers, one sister, and 13 nieces and nephews — and while our language may lack the majesty of the Sioux, it is nearly as voluminous. We call ice cream “beluga,” a remote control a “mocha” and bathing “souping.” Partly this can be attributed to my father, who loves wordplay, and will happily address anything or anyone with gibberish. He found his children’s early attempts at speech hilarious, and he held onto our garbled words, encouraging the mispronunciations.

However, there is little doubt that a big part of our family’s special language can be attributed to my parents’ minor Freudian hangups. They absolutely abhor “bathroom words.” They share such an intense aversion one wonders if this wasn’t what united them to begin with. I picture them meeting — my father, 6-foot-4, handsome, a golf enthusiast and virtuoso insurance salesman, approaching my mother, 5-foot-7, the former Miss Clark County.

“Would you like to have dinner sometime?” He’d wink. “And maybe later, we’ll have a baseball team’s worth of children?”

“Why I’d love to!” My mother would flash her blue eyes, discreetly adjusting her bouffant.

“Excellent.” My father smiles. “Oh, and by the way, I hate all words related to the excretory system. Maybe we can make our children hate them too?”

“Wonderful!” My mother beams.

It’s easy to imagine the scene. After all, my parents have been married over 40 years and still hold hands. And while they have many other things in common — a mutual love of iceberg lettuce and watching the television at ear-shattering levels, to name two — perhaps one of their greatest bonds is a disgust for those words that rhyme with shmart, shmoop and shmee.

Maybe my father was disgusted at his children’s names – what other reason would he have to refer to my sister as Frog Face and me as Lana Banana Cabana Beach Pie ?

Are there words that you simply hate the sound of and are there words that you or your family have replaced?

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474 Comments so far

  1. ashamasha

    ooh another one here for baby talk – esp ‘choccy’ instead of chocolate baaaarghhh!! you’re not 3 eewww

    ‘toilet’ – cannot STAND asking where the toilet is – automatically links in my head with what you’re going to do in there….much prefer the American version – ‘bathroom’ … much more civilised :)

    and pronouncing ‘wary’ as ‘weary’…. how on earth does that happen? there’s no ‘e’ there people!

    ‘dear’….please don’t call me dear, it’s very patronizing :P

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  2. AC

    -Vibe
    -Cup of chino
    -Gig

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  3. Jane

    Haha I don’t mind panties! Better than knickers *shudder*

    I hate yog-ert. And nach-os. (it’s nah-choes). And pasta (it’s pahhhhsta).

    I also hate crisps for chips as someone said below! And i hate pudding when it’s used to describe all kinds of dessert – it’s just plain misleading. Pudding is pudding. Ice cream is not pudding!

    Also hate thongs being called flip flops!

    And yes – agree on the ‘wifey’ thing, although strangely ‘hubby’ doesn’t bother me so much.

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    • Lellak

      hahaha dont go to the UK then! they use all of those :) You would hate speaking to my father – imagine all the words you hate spoken in a Geordie accent lol

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    • christinedavie

      i think nachoes is the aussie version, and whilst there is no official mexican dish of nachos they would call it NACH-OSS.

      my mum says Risssotto, not rizotto drives me bananas for some reason, not logical really.

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  4. Bradley

    Should I vomit, it’s referred to as “talking to Daniel McGrew”.

    I actually fall about on the floor laughing when I hear some of the slang words used to describe bodily functions. It happens when you don’t associate with polite society.

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    • Ecomumma

      My dad still (he’s 60) says he was ‘calling for Ruuuuuth’ or ‘speaking to God on the big white telephone’ if he has been vomitting!

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  5. Theo

    What about when people make a plural out of singular nouns – like Melways and Myers.
    Also – agree with ‘arks’ for ‘ask’ and another dislike is ‘ong-ions’ for onions. Chillax is ridulous.
    Reading fashion magazines I don’t like seeing a pair of pants described as a ‘pant’ or a lipstick shade as ‘a nude lip’.

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    • MissT

      And Westfields!

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    • Lu

      Plurals – yes! Drives me insane. And cutlery pronounced as ‘cuttle-ry’ and film as ‘fil-em’, ‘somethink, anythink…., ‘Aushtrowlya’ rather than Australia.
      And people who cant pronounce ‘th’.

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      • MissT

        I was made fun of in school for saying “oss-tray-lee-uh” instead of “a-stray-a”.

        But then I also say cer-e-mun-y instead of cer-e-moan-y, darnse instead of daynce, charnce instead of chaynce and don’t even ask me to try to day bush. It comes out as boosh every time.

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        • I use the same pronunciations…we are such Nanas!

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        • simone

          Do you say carsel?

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          • Absolutely!

            But isn’t Carsel/Cassel a Syd/Melb thing…?

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            • KatLizzy

              Darnse, charnse, carsel are all South Australian.
              Also – Lego or Laygo?

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            • I don’t know of any native Sydney-siders who say Cassel for Castle…am prepared to be corrected…but it’s always a sign to me that you’re not from Sydney if you do say Cassel…

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            • MissT

              I say Carsel.

              Native Sydney sider :)

              John, we are twinsies.

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        • Kirstchick

          Miss T are u sure you’re not a kiwi?? That’s the way we pronounce those words… ;-)

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      • feistyangel

        My partner cannot say th .. three is pronouced free, thor was pronouced as four etc. But he did have an undiagnosed hearing problem until he was 7 or 8. It was so bad that he pronouced his name as Tennessee instead of Timothy beacuse that was what he thought it was

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    • Emmeline

      YES! My mother in law says “Targets” instead of “Target” (as in the store). What is with that?

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      • ZO

        My mum used to say ick ee a instead of ikea. She wasn’t trying to be funny.

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        • JimmmyMick

          I heard James May on Top Gear refer to an “Ip Od” once. Took me a moment to realise what he was talking about

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      • JimmmyMick

        I loathe hearing “Coleses”, as in, “I’ll just go down to Coleses to get some milk”

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  6. Linus van Pelt

    I can’t stand when people use the word “agreeance”… It’s not a word people- check your dictionaries!

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    • Agreement

      I am absolutely with you! My family pulled out the dictionary this weekend especially to confirm that the word is in fact agreement, not agreeance. We even had a discussion about who we have heard use the word!
      The word we discussed next was ‘its’ and its proper usage. Misplaced pronounciation is heaving criticised in our family. This sounds like we are weird when I write it down, but I guess our kids will grow up with better language skills!

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    • JimmmyMick

      I use it specifically to piss off people who I know it will annoy. In moderation, of course :-) Then I clearly follow up with a webinar on how rong they is.

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  7. rene

    I love the way children often make up or mispronounce words and they “stick” for the whole family!

    Our three year old daughter started calling her dummy “D” (pronounced “dee”) and now that is what the whole family calls them. Her newborn baby brother will just grow up thinking that is what they are called. She has also named her Nana and various other things around the house.

    I never talk baby talk to her but I LOVE this :)

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    • Jane

      My daughter used to say ‘cuggle’ instead of ‘cuddle’and now that is our family word for it …. Her 2 year old sister doesn’t know it is wrong. Cute though …. “mummy can I have a cuggle”.

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  8. laurenberry

    I don’t like “membrane” or “riddled” as in “riddle with maggots”…both words make my skin crawl. I also don’t like the word “functionality” and I get irritated seeing “gaol” spelt “jail”.

    :-) Haha…there were more there than I realised when I started this comment!!

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  9. Grace

    I hate being called ‘darl’ or ‘hun’ *shudder*
    Also ‘expresso’ for espresso. There’s nothing express about it, it takes longer than instant people!

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    • Bradley

      I refer to my MIL as hun. That’s short for Attila the Hun.

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      • dfordezi

        This made me giggle. My husband calls my SIL Mona. Her name is Tracey, but she whinges and moans all the time. It has got to the point where sometimes he can’t remember her real name.

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    • Tripitaka

      I used to have to feed my daugher expressed breast milk, and we would call it “expresso”.. so it seems extra yucky to me when people call espresso expresso, as it makes me think of drinking breast milk.

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  10. Mooner

    How about when people add an extra “i” into mischievous and pronounce it “miss-chee-vee-us” instead of “miss-che-vus” ? Annoying!!

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    • MissT

      I have never heard anyone say “miss-che-vus”.

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      • I do…my cats are very miss-che-vus

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      • Mooner

        I guess that shows how ingrained the incorrect pronunciation has become – if you’ve never heard it pronounced correctly!

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  11. Loulee

    Panties. Oh yuk. Ew.

    And while we are at it…. what is going on with the youth of today? None of them seem to know the difference between your and you’re. It drives me crazy. “Your the best”, “Your my best friend”, “Your invited”.

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    • D

      Totally agree with you on the your & you’re. Drives me insane. What are they teaching these kids at school???!!!

      I can’t stand when people use the term ‘peeps’. Makes my blood boil for some reason.

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  12. thisbee_plath

    i hate the world ‘like’ when used in appropriately i.e. ‘She was like so not happy’. argh makes me sick. and the overuse of the words ‘you know’ at the end of every sentence. Footballers when interviewed seem to do this frequently.

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  13. Bejazzled

    I went throught this stage where my partner constantly used the word “ravenous” to describe our children when they were hungry, it annoyed the f*ck out of me he used it that much, and he says ‘luscious’ alot, and I don’t like either of those words now. hah

    But my 3 yr old is referring to my car indicator as ‘the tick-tock’ and it just sounds so cute….I love it.

    Im fine with moist as I ONLY associate it with cake!

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  14. Kirsty

    It’s even hard to type – “discharge”

    Eewwwwwwwww

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  15. cerry

    When my brother was little, he used to call both microwaves and motorbikes my-a-ai. My brother is now 24, and my parents still heat stuff up in the motorbike and talk about people driving microwaves down the freeway. We’ve also been eating stickytape pudding for dessert for as long as I can remember, but no one remembers who initially made that mistake any longer.

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  16. Mooner

    Lana could you explain this one : “I absolutely hate it when people say space when they are talking about anything other than having air around them or the solar system” ?

    What are the other uses for ‘space’ that you hate?

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    • Caz

      I assume she means as in architects referring to rooms as
      “spaces”. They also say something “reads” rather than “looks like.”

      I hate the word pantyhose, and the pantyhose themselves.

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    • Anon

      People at my work say ‘space’ all the time it drives me batty. They are talking about a certain policy or procedure and define it as a ‘space’.
      The other one I hate is ‘float’ as in I will float the idea with the rest of the staff. All I can think of is life rafts sinking and capt jack sparrow (actually a bit of capt sparrow is ok!)

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  17. Bradley

    The word ghastly said in a South African accent would come across as “gawstley”….and that would be ghastly !

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    • “Outrageous” spoken with a strong South African accent is extremely outrageous….

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  18. MissT

    No words make me cringe but these grammatical errors make me cringe:

    Have not Of – Should have, could have and would have not should of, could of and would of.

    Except or accept – Except is a preposition that means “excluding.” Accept is a verb that means “to receive, admit, regard as true, say yes.”

    Unnecessary use of prepositions – A preposition is a word that creates a relationship between other words. For example: above, around, for, of, off, by, over, with…
    If the sentence makes sense without the preposition, do not include it. For example: “he jumped off of the swing”.

    Alot – There is no such word as “alot”, it does not exist.

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  19. simone

    I forgot to say I hate the word ‘crisps’ for chips. Another one my husband shits me with!

    And I hate the word anaesthetist – mostly because I can’t say it! (In fact I’m sure I can even spell it!)

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    • cerry

      Don’t worry, I have a friend whose step-father is an anaesthetist. When it comes up, I say that he’s a “guy who gives people anasthetic”, cause I cannot for the life of me say the actual word. It has been bought up on numerous ocassions by many people, just to laugh at me stumbling over the real word.

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      • Anon

        I can’t say aluminum. Thankfully i don’t need to very often.

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  20. quattromamma

    This could go on for days..
    Hate Hate hate, all of those made up words in Dr Seus books for odd looking creatures, I have tried to hide all of ours but every now & then one re-appers, usually at bedtime.

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  21. Bradley

    I once read that during the Victorian era, polite people would dine on a bossom of chicken before they would tuck into a feed of chicken breast.

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  22. Lu

    I hate back yard and call it back garden, I hate dinner being called tea and the word gastric is just way too descriptive for me. Upset tummy is all we need to know.

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    • Katyberry

      My mum and dad say “tea” for dinner and it drives my husband bonkers. When they come to stay they are always telling our children “time for tea”. Justin can barely stifle his snarky laughter when my eldest says it’s not tea it’s dinner granny.

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      • Melissa J

        OH! I hate this as well! Tea is tea! it’s not dinner! Dinner is dinner! madness!

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    • Me

      yes my boyfriends family call lunch “dinner” and dinner “tea” still confuses the hell out of me when they ask are you coming over for dinner.. they mean lunch!

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    • nursee

      i say dinner for the evening meal at home at work i always say tea for dinner. don’t know why.

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  23. Lulu

    I immigrated from South Africa *several* years ago, but I still can’t use the word ‘lollies’ for general confectionary. They’re *sweets*, dammit; ‘lollies’ is only used for lollipops.

    My family background is quite varied, so there are plenty of words we use which aren’t standard English (or even English). This includes a number of Yiddish words, although we’re not Jewish.

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    • Bradley

      Lollies, lollies, lollies ! :)

      My aunt from Melbourne once referred to an ice block as an icy-pole, whereas the neighbour from England called them ice-lollies.

      In Melbourne it’s a cantaloupe, in Brisbane it’s rock melon.

      In Adelaide, it’s Fritz. In Brisbane, it’s Devon or luncheon sausage. Some call it knob, I have a friend who calls it wheel meat because it is sliced in rounds.

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      • Anonymous

        and in Perth it’s called polony

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  24. Bradley

    I have to be honest and say that I don’t have an aversion to the sound of any particular word being spoken.

    Certainly, I prefer my chicken cooked so that it is moist rather than wet. Far more preferable to eat moist chicken than overcooked and dry.

    Knickers, panties, undies, Uncle Grundys, Bombay Bloomers. In our house they are undergarments worn around your backside, or if you prefer…your bum, your butt, your duff or your derriere.

    I was my dishes in the sink. I have a double sink and I rinse my dishes in a basin that has been set in one side for this purpose.

    In our house we cook food in the oven on bacon paper (baking paper) and get very thingy, edgy, fluttery, nervous or plain pissed when we can’t find grussle scrugs (Brussels sprouts) to eat with our Christmas or Chrissie, turkey dinner.

    Words are words. Some you use only in front of the family, some you don’t use in mixed, polite company and some you can use in front of anybody to solicit a laugh. Some words are used by the bold and avoided by the prissy.

    They tell me that more Australians should love the sound of the word “republic” because it contains the words pub and lic/k. Go figure that one out !

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    • Bradley

      Actually, thinking about it….the way that some Americanisms have replaced words does annoy me. I eat biscuits rather than cookies and I’ll never walk into the fruit and veg section to look for a red pepper. They’re capsicums !

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      • Nora

        How about some scallions or cilantro?

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        • Bradley

          Cilantro or coriander…..I can’t stand the taste !

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      • MissT

        Hehehehe… cookie….

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    • Swester

      My husband was using a shifter (big spanner) and my 3 year old said you could whack a baddie with that. It has been referred to as the baddiewhacker ever since. Still cracks me up!

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  25. OssieLeo

    Aks for ask, brings me to a boiling point!

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    • …and pitcher….as in, she took a pitcher of me with her camera…

      Oh, and noosed to….as in, I noosed to own a really good camera…

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    • Alex

      My husbands whole family uses aks. They can’t hear it though. Annoys the hell out of me though!

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  26. Melissa J

    OMG so many words I hate with passion… delish… sesh.. lover.. panties.. moist.. horrid..
    People pronouncing words differently like .. appreciate as a-pree..seeeee-ate (it’s a-pree-she-ate!)
    Any kind of slang when discussing sexual terms.. cum.. jizz.. I could make an extensive list but I won’t, it’s too gross.
    There are so many words and sayings that I have passionate, irrational hate for in this world.

    But then I love some words just as much, like .. bungalow.. serendipity.. boogie.. titmouse.. glossy.. meandering.. splash.. smite.. gaggle of geese.. boob.. wiggy.. pretty much any funny sounding words that i make up.. splediferous.. whammy!

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    • Lu

      I hate ‘Singapore’ pronounced with the ‘g’ as in Sing-gap-pore.

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  27. Clare

    Made-up words that my brothers and I said as children are still used in our family conversations today. We say jigamite (vegemite), jam sam sam (jam sandwich) and jam sam da jigamite (vegemite sandwich!) :)
    Other words we came up with were marikawave and marikaphone. it’s endless really!
    My Mum also loved calling us silly names and my 20 yr old brother still gets called Charlie Horse, Chops or Chopsy-doodle (he’d be very embarrassed if he knew I was telling everyone this!) and my 22 yr old brother gets Kaplunski. Don’t ask!

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    • Bradley

      I have to ask. Kaplunski….please explain ! :)

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      • CB

        Haha, his name is Kyle, which somehow became kol kol kaplunski! Not sure how, which is why I said don’t ask! ;)

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  28. Jennine

    Can’t bear the words moist, soiled , panties and ablution. Also can’t bear it when people order a “Cup of chino”. While we are at French polished nails also give me the heebie-geebies. We have twins so we went through that whole invent your own language thing in our house. Your boots are officially called your “doots”, slippers are “splipders”, baked beans are “toot toots”, sausages are “sauscisons”. Also can’t bring myself to use the word “flaps”….can’t believe I even typed it1

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    • katehunter

      Isn’t it funny that moist, soiled and panties kind of go together! Ewwwww. Did I write that?

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    • Bradley

      A bird flaps its wings to fly. Does that use of the word flaps embarrass you ? :) :) :)

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  29. Prue

    Prolapse. It makes me shiver and squeeze my legs together every time I hear or see it.

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    • Rick Morton

      Even though the ‘pro’ part of it makes it all sound so darned positive!

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    • Bradley

      No wonder the artist Prolapse Hart shortened his name to Pro !

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  30. ange

    We had many invented words and phrases growing up, all thanks to my dad! In fact when I was in grade ten I made him a special book for Christmas with all of them in it!

    The most enduring ones are the names he calls me and my brother. I’m always Sis and my brother is Dig. And the dog is Doogie Dog. None of these have any connection with our real names and I have no idea where they come from! Oh and mum sometimes is called Macrocarpa which is a pine tree Im fairly sure! And sometimes she’s Carp-stad. My friends all find it quite hilarious!

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    • ange

      Oh and I forgot that in my house now with my partner who is a computer programmer, I really enjoy constantly using computer related words incorrectly just to annoy him. Some of these have now stuck!

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    • kellie

      panties is so pervy! lolling at the dad words, my dad referred to my childhood bras as training wheels…my most hated words are specimen, flop, panties, and most of all, when people (usually teenagers) say yous, as in yous guys or what are yous doing…. arrrrggghh!

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      • Bradley

        A specimen is an Italian astronaut.

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  31. Anonymous

    it’s a made-up word that i hate most of all! every single time i hear the word ‘chillax’ (chillout and relax as one word) i scream inside and grind my teeth. AAARRRGGGHHH! to make matters worse my husband will use it to taunt me when i am stressing out about something minor.

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    • Katyberry

      Oh, I so agree!

      If I want to be really annoying to my husband I can just say “Chillax Babe!”.

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      • Anonymous

        if my husband really wants to taunt me (and totally turn me OFF) he will come up close to me and say ‘chillax baby… let it happen’. he thinks it’s funny and all i think is dirty old perv!

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  32. simone

    This is a great post by the way. You should do another soon about slightly wrong phrases. I recently posted on my FB page that I’d overheard someone say ‘it’s not rocket scientists’ and others added a few crackers…’For all intensive purposes’, ‘Distance makes the heart grow fonder’ etc.

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    • Anonymous

      I’ve had my husband say “it’s the last draw” rather than “it’s the last straw”, when were having an argument. I tried hard not to burst out laughing.

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    • Girly World

      My mother wants to “fly to Melbourne to see the sequins of Phantom of the Opera with Anthony Warlord” Look out Melbournians

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  33. Gin & Tonic

    “Panties” is the worst word in the english language.

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    • Dan

      Gin and Tonic are two of the best though :)

      Can’t wait to have a few of those puppies after this baby arrives. Now I’m going to be craving one all day. I might have to put a slice of lemon into some plain tonic and trick myself into thinking it’s the real deal.

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  34. Sal

    A few words have entered our family vocabulary via early attempts from the children, such as
    “oosh” for shoe,
    “imee” for icecream, and
    “loomph or loomphing” for the kind of massage that involves gentle pinching of the skin!

    Some of the words I hate (all relics of my upbringing of course) are:
    “often” with an audible t,
    “haitch” instead of “aitch”,
    “mucus” (doesn’t everyone hate that word??),
    “snot”,
    “fart”,
    “lolly”.

    I realise that it is ridiculous to have an aversion to these last three, especially when you have kids who love these words, so I am trying to use them as much as possible!

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  35. simone

    I hate the words ‘bollard’ and ‘twine’. And just to shit me my husband pronounces muesli ‘musli’ and vitamins as though the first part rhymes with hit. My mother in law pronounces pizza ‘pitza’ which also drives me balmy!

    We have a lot of made up words in our family. One thing the boys like to do is just abbreviate words to their first letter. So ‘E of FA?’ means ‘episode of Futurama?’ or ‘G of C’ means ‘game of chess’.

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    • Lana

      You have just reminded me of the way my mother says yoghurt – it’s not pretty. It’s not just the soft yo she gives it, it’s even the way she says the gurt part *shudders*

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    • simone

      Oh yes yoghurt! That’s on my mother in laws annoying list too. Ugh. And knowing how much it grates my cheese, whenever she says it my husband pretends he hasn’t heard her and makes her repeat it a couple of times.

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    • Miss Lucille

      And I hate it when people say ‘matoor’ for mature. Also I know two Kiwis who both say ‘atypical’ when they actually mean ‘typical’ – is this atypically a NZ thing?

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    • girly

      I HATE it when people say vitamins that way!

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    • E

      I absolutely HATE how my mum & sis, and a few other random people say Onion. They pronounce it “ung-yin”… It’s Un-yin… UN-YIN!!
      thanks, it’s been bothering me for years!

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  36. Rick Morton

    Utilise. It’s use.

    Whilst. It’s while.

    Humdinger. No. Although I may use it ironically.

    And yes, moist. My stars I hate that word.

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    • Petal

      Great minds think alike Rick!

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    • katehunter

      Also, basically is basically a useless word. Actually is basically useless too, in fact.

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      • Andrew

        I once worked with a chap who had an obsession with “virtually”, “literally” and “actually”. One time he became infuriated with someone and used all three in the one sentence. “Actually, I’m literally going to go down there and virtually knock his block off.” I had to stifle the laughter.

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        • katehunter

          I love the word ‘chap’

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          • girly

            Chap is an awesome word. I also love ‘partial’ and ‘dude’

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        • MissT

          Literally!! Oh, you’re going to do it literally? As opposed to how?

          I have a particular hate of the word “Actually”, especially when people making appointments use it to start a sentence “Actually I can’t make that time”.

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        • Kris2040

          I’ve worked in a couple of call centres, and I’ve found that people use words like basically, actually, literally when they aren’t actually that articulate but want to sound like they are. They seem to think that verbosity equals intelligence and authority.

          As much as I love Jamie Oliver, his incessant use of “literally” does my head in.

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  37. MissT

    My cousin can’t stand the world “moist”. I enjoy teasing her. Moist makes me think of cake.

    There are many words that make me giggle, fart, bum, erected, teehee… I can’t think of any I hate. I’m sure other people will.

    I don’t have many family-only words, although I call my brother Coosie (his name is Lucas) because that was my first word.

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  38. lisaschofield

    My mum called breasts “bosoms” which always made me cringe in an 8 year old girl-too-much-rude stuff kind of way. The words vomit and heave are also a little too descriptive for comfort, especially when my father in law describes the rain as “heaving down” shudder!

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  39. Petal

    Panties makes me think of porn and I can’t stand the word utilize. Why can’t people just say use?

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    • Rhona

      I agree! I hate utilize! I have the same problem with requisition instead of request, and obligated instead of obliged.

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  40. Bec Sparrow

    I hate it when people use the word, “ladies”. It just makes me cringe. “Hey, ladies …” And on dating sites when men say, “I’m looking for a lady who ….”

    ARGH!!!! Can’t stand it.

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    • simone

      Bec my friends and I have reclaimed lady recently. As in, ‘hey lady want to grab a coffee’. I quite like it now. Can only be said by friends though, not sleazy old blokes.

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      • Bec Sparrow

        Oh that’s funny! Actually my friend Chrissie likes to use the word “lady” now that I think about it. And it sounds fun coming from her. So yes! Good point. I too will reclaim the word LADY!!!!!!!

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        • girly

          My sister in law calls me “little lady” Coming from her it seems a little bohemian :)

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    • MissT

      Dimitri Martin says everything sounds creepy if you add the word “Ladies” at the end. “Thanks for coming to the show, ladies. Help I’ve fallen into a well and I’m trapped, ladies.”

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBcxwrNTpGg

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      • Bec Sparrow

        So true!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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      • Kitten

        Haha Miss-T, my girlfriends do this constantly! “Would you like another wine…ladieeees?” “I’m just off to the bathroom…ladieeees”

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    • cerry

      Totally not just you. My male boss once made the mistake of walking into the office and saying “Hi, ladies. How is everyone this morning?” Turns out all 4 of the women in the office hate being called ladies, and we ripped the poor guy a new one.

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  41. In no particular order, here are some words I hate:

    Miranda – Nile – Devine – Fred

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    • Kris2040

      Katter – Barnaby – Abbott – Bob – Howard – Joyce – Tony – John…

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      • We both left out Bolt and Andrew….

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  42. katehunter

    I can’t stand the word ‘affordable’ and make a point of never using it in ads. When ever I read it or hear it I think, ‘How the hell do you know what I can afford?’

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    • detachableprincess

      Or even worse: “For the price of a cup of coffee a day…”. Fuck off, I like coffee!

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      • KellBell

        Haha, I’m the opposite, I think “I don’t even drink coffee!!”

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  43. Ladybug

    I can’t stand the word coin but only when someone uses it in the context of “I’m making some pretty good coin at this job”. I don’t know why but it just makes me cringe every time.

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    • katehunter

      I’m with you! eg ‘I’m going to work in Honkers for the coin,’ translates to tosser.

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  44. Andrew

    My girlfriend also hates the word ‘moist’, although I’m slowly desensitizing her to it. She also cringes at ‘maggots’ and ‘scrotum’ and ‘pus’.

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    • Miss Lucille

      …. how about…. smegma?

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      • Rick Morton

        Ew! Why won’t it let go of my eyes!

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      • Andrew

        That got an ‘oh god yuck’… Whereas I just picture Dr Evil saying “We’re surrounded by liquid hot smegma!” and giggle myself silly.

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        • Smegma

          Oh dear I was thinking Dr Evil’s magma until google got involved. There is such a word?! I am horrified.

          I also curse the person who told me what felching is.

          And I thought the name Agnes was one of worst on planet until I heard a french pronounciation. Now it is actually a fave (but never for a little aussie girl)

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      • >

        I just googled it. I wish I hadn’t. *tears!

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  45. Jasper

    I can not bear the word j-u-n-k-e-t. I certainly couldn’t stand to eat it. Yuck. It’s all terrible. Just thinking about it makes the back of my throat tremble.

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  46. WillaWay

    I really hate it when people talk about being ill and actually use the word diarrhoea. I just want to run away screaming.

    I hate it when people say pasta to rhyme with rasta, and salsa with a short a. I get murderous when people say haitch for the lovely letter aitch.

    And the latest to add to the list is “top tips”, the favourite phrase of every horrible DIY section of cooking/home DIY etc show. My top tip? Don’t give me any more effing top tips.

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    • Laurensmum

      Oh my gosh, I thought I was the ONLY person out there that pronounces the letter H as “aitch”. We were brought up to never ever ever ever ever say “haitch” but I hear it from everyone and it drives me bonkers.

      I’m trying to reinforce “aitch” to my 3 year old, but I have society against me in this quest!

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    • carolynj

      I hate to break it to you but that’s actually the correct pronunciation of pasta and salsa.
      You are correct however that the word diarrhoea should never be uttered aloud.

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      • WillaWay

        I don’t even care if it’s right or wrong, it just irritates me! :) Is it really right? Surely lovely Italian and South American people aren’t so crass as to pronounce it that way :)

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  47. Nora

    I may be alone in this but I cringe when I hear the term hubby instead of husband. I cant stand it!

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    • IJ

      I can’t stand hubby either. Also tellie for television irks me. And anything that resembles baby talk spoken by adults to adults. Wrong!

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      • detachableprincess

        Ooooh yeah, baby talk by adults! Even baby talk to your children is just wrong. I figure, it’s my job as a parent to model the correct way to speak, and my children will sort out the correct pronunciation when they can. It’s never “Time for yum-yums and a dwink” at my house, let me tell you…

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    • casey

      I hate the word hubby too…wifey as well.

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      • MissT

        Wifey is the worst word ever!

        I don’t like the word “hubby” but I use it. Primarily as my husband does not like to be referred to by name on my blog (he’s a teacher, students search for his name) and “Husband said…” sounds more odd than “Hubby said…”

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      • Anonymous

        Yes, i hate the word hubby the most! And curd. There’s never a good time to use the word curd.

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  48. detachableprincess

    I can’t think of any words that I don’t like, not off the top of my head anyway. No doubt other commenters will come up with them, and only then will I realise! :D

    Words we have invented…. My uncle came up with a great one: Oozle. Just imagine trying to squish yourself between, say, the dining table and the wall, and you have to squeeze and twist and stick one leg out to get through. That’s oozling. Or slightly cold honey coming out of the jar – that’s oozling.

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  49. girly

    My family calls thongs “smackers” My second eldest brother called them that at two. He decided that because they “smack” against your feet. I didn’t even realize this was a family thing until I was a teenager and Mum explained it to me, haha.

    My Dad likes to wish people a merry “Mitmas” because of the same brother as a child couldn’t say “Christmas”

    My Dad always likes to rhyme. I get “Amy, don’t blame me!!” and my puppy Nala gets “Nala Parlour” or “Schnarla” (He is strange, lol)

    This might be off topic, but I hate it when people say “Broccol-eye” instead of “Broccoli” I guess it is a tomayto, tomarto type thing..

    UPDATE!! I wanna punch things when people say “Stoopid” instead of “Stew-pid”

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    • detachableprincess

      Teehee – when crossing the road and you have to push the button, my mum always says ‘bunter’, because that’s what I called it when I was 4. :)

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    • MissT

      I say “stop-pid” just because it sounds funny.

      As for to-mart-o to-may-to, who the hell says po-tart-o?!

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  50. Miss Lucille

    Am I first? Am I first??? :)

    We’ve read many times on MM about people using the word ‘vagina’ when they really mean ‘vulva’ … and I agree with the general consensus, because there is a difference. But a big HOWEVER follows that: I don’t think I could say the word ‘vulva’ out loud in any conversation!

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    • MissT

      Oh neither!

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    • quattromamma

      I drive a Volvo & often refer to it as vulva, although depends on the company..

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      • Anonymous

        I call my Volvo the same thing!!! Great minds…

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