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 8 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 8 months ago
Personoid can leave you VERY annoyed!!
ClaytonEmery1 8 months ago
The definition I heard is, “A factoid is a false idea that everyone thinks is true.”
TBenzedrine Premium Member 8 months ago
I’m not going to ask about hemorrhoids……
syzygy47 8 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 8 months ago
Why have I never noticed this? Solecism alert!
rugeirn 8 months ago
Dear Ralston, thank you for ably stating the meaning of the word “factoid” while thereby proving yourself wrong.
gopher gofer 8 months ago
to quibble about this would be really adultoid…