So

Fitz is fed up with people trying to be funny by saying interweb on the radio.

I spend over three hours commuting each day, so I listen to a LOT of podcasts. Most of them are made specifically as podcasts, while the rest are normal radio programmes converted into podcasts after they have been aired.

Many of the podcasts I listen to take the form of conversations between two or more people—either as formal interviews or informal chats. Over the last few months, I've begun to notice how many people in these conversations begin their answers to direct questions with the word so—even when what they are about to say is not a consequence of what they've said previously.

"How do you intend to vote in the next election?" a hypothetical questioner might ask.

"So I will be voting for X," might be the hypothetical response.

These sos are not at all necessary and get to be mildly irritating once you notice them. Which is why I'm mentioning them now: so that you will start to notice them, and will be equally mildly irritated.

I think it's an attempt to sound a bit more intelligent. If you begin a sentence with so, it implies that it logically follows on from what you were just saying—SO it stands to reason that you must be making a logical, cogent argument. Even when you're not.

It's not just a British thing. The Americans are up to it as well. In fact, they probably started it knowing them: I don't know why, but it just sounds American to me.

If, by any chance, you have picked up the new habit of using the word so in this way, please stop it. It doesn't make you sound more profound; it just makes you mildly irritating. And if you notice anyone else doing it, tell them from me to stop being so ridiculous.

Richard Carter

A fat, bearded chap with a Charles Darwin fixation.

4 comments

  1. That's bloody great! As if I haven't got enough things to get irritated about. What with poor grammar and spelling and people saying they are getting bored or fed up of doing something instead of bored with it. Newspapers have a habit of printing pictures in reverse just because it fits a space or page better, or because they are morons (you look at the way a gentleman's shirt or jacket buttons up) and then tell me I'm wrong. Now Mr. Richard Carter has given me something else to get pissed off about because he so knows that idiots like me will be so looking for it. Merry bloody Christmas.

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