Literally Figuratively
Literally Figuratively Judd Garrett Have you noticed lately that the word āliterallyā has slowly morphed to mean āfigurativelyā, like when someone says, āI literally died laughing.ā They did not actually die. They were speaking figuratively, but they used the word āliterallyā. This is not merely a common grammatical mix-up that has somehow become adopted into our language like āaffectedā and āeffectedā or āthenā and āthanā. This seemingly innocuous substitution is representative of how our collective mindsets have changed; we are now living in a figurative world, and this figurative world has become our new reality. The literal, the authentic no longer matters. The figurative is the only thing that is important these days. No one is interested in the facts, no one is interested in the truth, we are only interested in the narrative and the spin which only alleges a certain version of the truth. Like literally and figuratively, the word ātruthā has replaced the word āopinionā. The expres...