I may have remarked before (here or elsewhere) on the strange slogans or taglines that sometimes show up in the we're-not-supposed-to-call-them-advertisements on the local public radio station (like the University of Massachusetts' "You were, you are, UMass").
Lately my ear has been caught by a line from the rather lengthy spot for Legal Sea Bar, (which seems to be an offshoot of Legal Seafood), identifying it as "a focused yet full-flavored social urban venue". Other problems with this phrase aside, what's that "yet" doing there?
Lately my ear has been caught by a line from the rather lengthy spot for Legal Sea Bar, (which seems to be an offshoot of Legal Seafood), identifying it as "a focused yet full-flavored social urban venue". Other problems with this phrase aside, what's that "yet" doing there?
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Date: 2010-01-28 08:58 pm (UTC)Dr. Whom, Consulting Linguist, Grammarian, Orthoëpist, and Philological Busybody
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Date: 2010-01-29 12:58 am (UTC)It reminds me of the slogan for some cigarette in my youth: "Longer, yet milder". Aside from the non-comparing comparative (a staple of ad-talk), I always wondered why one would expect a long cigarette to be harsher than a short one, which is what the phrase seemed to imply.
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Date: 2010-01-29 01:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-01-29 05:10 am (UTC)