For some reason, no matter how many scripts I allowed from 
qz.com<http://qz.com>, I couldn't get the graphic.

Is "gruntled" on the list?  We've been using that for years in the sense of 
"George is disgruntled." - "And he's never likely to be gruntled".

Ray Parks
Consilient Heuristician/IDART Old-Timer
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On Aug 4, 2015, at 10:36 AM, glen wrote:

On 08/04/2015 09:21 AM, Barry MacKichan wrote:
I find it very hard to believe that 'unbothered' is new. 'Bothered' has been in 
my vocabulary for at least 50 years. The OED does not have it, but it *does* 
have 'bother' as a verb going back at least as far as Jonathan Swift.

That just means you're _hip_, one of the insiders who first used it in its 
proper subculture. 8^)

--
⇔ glen

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