Monday, November 25, 2019
Verbification at Work
Verbification at Work  Verbification at Work  Verbification at Work                                      By Maeve Maddox                                            	  Trudy Ripka writes   I have come across recipes which are made into healthier versions of the original.à   My problem is accepting the word HEALTHIFIED.à   There is a particular site which uses this and a lot of the readers dislike the term; I am included.à   This could be a case of verbing adjectives.  Whatever we call it, something is going on. Apparently just about any word can be turned into an -ify verb and then back-formed into a -tion noun.  healthify and healthification:  ââ¬Å"Healthifiedâ⬠ Fluffy Orange Fruit Dip  ââ¬Å"Healthifiedâ⬠ Chicken Pot Pie  `Healthification and the Promises of Urban Space  Fit or Fad: The Healthification Of Starbucks Foodstuffs  greenify and greenification:  Greenify for Better Business  5 Ways to Greenify Your Home  How have you greenified your home?  The Greenification of Walmart  friendify and friendification:  Youll now receive a Friendifcation Notification. . . when a member adds you to their friends list.  our current MySpace policy is to friendify anyone with an interesting looking avatar . . . If you get friendified by someone you dont know, its probably because you have a cool avatar.  blogify and blogification:  Creativity Has Now Been Blogified  So we have blog-this and blog-that, basically everything has been blogified . . .  blogify: To dramatize or overexaggerate. To describe otherwise bland subjects in a horribly depressing and/or dramatic manner. To make dreary . . . Urban Dictionary   Iââ¬â¢m wondering when the schools are going to get around to  grammifying their students.  Iââ¬â¢d say that a little grammification is in order.  Joking aside, use drives usage.  When a word is felt to meet a need by a large number of speakers, it will find a place in the language. The word gentrification, for example, has won acceptance with the meaning   The process by which an (urban) area is rendered middle-class. OED  The fate of these new -ify verbs is uncertain. Many of the writers who are using them are uncomfortable enough to enclose them in quotation marks. Writers and speakers who donââ¬â¢t want them to catch on can choose not to use them.                                           Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the Expressions category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:"Based in" and "based out of"When to Form a Plural with an Apostrophe10 Terms for the Common People    
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