this post was submitted on 11 Jul 2025
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inb4 words change meaning over time
Even if I accept words change meaning, what does literally mean now? What are people trying to convey when they say it? The only slightly practical thing it does is add emphasis. It's a useless filler word.
You answered your own, like, question.
They're doing what most people do: copying what they see other people say, particularly people they wish to emulate in some way.
Really, it's fine. Context makes it clear when we literally mean "literally" literally.
It literally doesn't. The whole point of "literally" is to establish that context.
That used to be the point of it. Over time the added impact that using it out of place gives to hyperbole has changed that point until it is necessary for enough context to exist to make clear that it is used in it's original manner.
It'll probably happen eventually to anything that replaces the world as well, sort of like how things like swear words and euphemisms lose their impact from overuse and end up getting replaced only to have the same happen again. At some level a quick way of saying "this is actually true" serves as an easy source of exaggeration if used somewhere where it clearly can't be so, and as soon as someone does that, the meaning starts being dependant on context.
Which is only so bad because the purpose of the word itself is to provide context. It literally means "this is not a euphemism", and the only reason to use it in the first place is if the existing context would lead one to assume it was.
When you need to give extra context and additional words to clarify an ambiguous "literally", you've robbed the word of its original meaning. It can no longer fulfill that purpose. It would literally be more efficient to just not use it at all, and just skip straight to whatever you were going to say to clarify the context. The meaning has been stolen.
I don't remember the last time someone used the word "literally" and I couldn't tell whether they meant it in the classic sense or in the modern sense, either as an intensifier or as filler. If you do, then I'd genuinely like to learn about that, because I don't think I could imagine such a scenario. I might lack imagination or I might not be around people who use the word often enough to judge.
I genuinely believe you overstate the matter, especially in claiming that the word had been robbed of its previous meaning. I still use the word exclusively with its classic meaning and I never see confused faces when I do. 🤷 (That's not any kind of proof, but merely a reason for my current position on this.)