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[return to "Researchers find evidence of ChatGPT buzzwords turning up in everyday speech"]
1. milanc+p6[view] [source] 2025-08-27 22:03:55
>>giulio+(OP)
"Recent large-scale upticks in the use of words like “delve” and “intricate” in certain fields, especially education and academic writing, are attributed to the widespread introduction of LLMs with a chat function, like ChatGPT, that overuses those buzzwords."

OK, but please don't do what pg did a year or so ago and dismiss anyone who wrote "delve" as AI writing. I've been using "delve" in speech for 15+ years. It's just a question where and how one learns their English.

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2. jgalt2+L8[view] [source] 2025-08-27 22:19:26
>>milanc+p6
Fair enough, but if you know you're audience may be dismissive of your writing and its message if you use such words, it behooves one to steer clear of AI slop words. IIRC, such offenses in school writing are tagged PWC (poor word choice).
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3. dingnu+tb[view] [source] 2025-08-27 22:39:49
>>jgalt2+L8
I'm not sure someone with a handle that references Ayn Rand's second most boring book has a right to comment on word choice lol
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4. Terr_+Jb[view] [source] 2025-08-27 22:41:53
>>dingnu+tb
It's one of the few books that I went into totally blind, and then hate-finished just so that I could confidently condemn it.

I've deleted a paragraph or two to avoid unilaterally taking everything too off topic, but I'll just say that the book is a self-contradictory artifact of hypocrisy that disrespects the reader.

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5. rcfox+hf[view] [source] 2025-08-27 23:13:01
>>Terr_+Jb
I also went into that book blind. I was in grade 12 and some organization was offering scholarships to people who wrote an essay about the book. I had a twice-daily 45-minute bus ride to fill, so it seemed like an easy win.

I didn't end up finishing the book.

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6. bryanl+rg[view] [source] 2025-08-27 23:23:59
>>rcfox+hf
Probably not the type of organization to give a scholarship to those who write an essay critical of the work.

Myself, I read it at age 12 and bought its premise at the time. Therefore I mentally categorize Ayn Rand devotees as people with the maturity I had at 12. That's a pretty low bar they're failing to clear.

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