Pain in the English
Pain in the English

Unpacking English, Bit by Bit

A community for questioning, nitpicking, and debating the quirks and rules of the English language.

Pain in the English
Pain in the English

Unpacking English, Bit by Bit

A community for questioning, nitpicking, and debating the quirks and rules of the English language.

Username

37p

Member Since

January 27, 2022

Total number of comments

1

Total number of votes received

2

Bio

Latest Comments

My view in the "next" vs "this" confusion is that it's lazy English that had become common usage that's caused it.
Clearly the dictionary definition of next is the next occurrence. There's no latitude for which week you're in to confuse things.

My view is that it started as "this week Thursday" and "next week Thursday" and the week part got dropped as happens very often in English (shop "open 24 hours" strictly means after a day it's opened it's closed. "A day" got lost somewhere!)

I suppose the answer is to be very clear on what is said and not assume that local idioms are understood by everyone.

Another example is time where half three can be half past three or half to three (half past two) in some areas.

English is ever evolving!!