Ink Pen by Phil Dunlap for March 20, 2024
Transcript:
hamhock: here's a neat factoid... ralston: "-oid" means "resembling." hamhock: what? ralston: the suffix "-oid" means resembling, but not exactly. like a humanoid is not a human. so a "factoid" should be something that seems like a fact, but isn't-in other words, a lie. it's a meaningless term. hamhock: you're the most annoying person I've ever met...ralston: now, that's a factoid!
LawrenceS 11 months ago
Ralston has confused ‘similar’ and ‘antonym’ it is an error not many can make. Would he insist a spheroid is a box because it’s not a perfect sphere?
markkahler52 11 months ago
Personoid can leave you VERY annoyed!!
ClaytonEmery1 11 months ago
The definition I heard is, “A factoid is a false idea that everyone thinks is true.”
TBenzedrine Premium Member 11 months ago
I’m not going to ask about hemorrhoids……
syzygy47 11 months ago
I needed to check the actual origin, the intended meaning.
“ Norman Mailer gets the credit for coming up with the word “factoid,” which he used in a 1973 biography of Marilyn Monroe. Merriam-Webster notes that Mailer called them “facts which have no existence before appearing in a magazine or newspaper, creations which are not so much lies as a product to manipulate emotion in the Silent Majority.”
Mailer seems to have chosen the suffix “oid” because it forms “resembling” nouns. Think of it this way: A “humanoid” resembles a human — but isn’t human. A “factoid,” then, resembles a fact — but isn’t one, according to Mailer’s definition. Judging from our email traffic, plenty of people agree with him”
willie_mctell 11 months ago
Why have I never noticed this? Solecism alert!
rugeirn 11 months ago
Dear Ralston, thank you for ably stating the meaning of the word “factoid” while thereby proving yourself wrong.
gopher gofer 11 months ago
to quibble about this would be really adultoid…