On Wed, 25 Jan 2012 15:38:12 -0800
Chris Kaynor <ckay...@zindagigames.com> wrote:

[...]
> >
> 
> Would you prefer the Oxford or Merriam-Webster dictionaries. They are
> a bit more established than dictionary.com in terms of standardizing
> the languages.
> 
> Definition 4 of the Merriam-Webster dictionary for "pretty" as an
> adjective says:
> 
> moderately large *:*
> considerable<http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/considerable>
>  <a very *pretty* profit><cost a *pretty* penny>
> 
> See:  http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/pretty
> 
> 
> The only definition for "pretty" as an adjective in the Oxford
> dictionary says:
> 
> *[*as submodifier] *informal*
> to a moderately high degree; fairly:
> he looked pretty fit for his age
> 
> See:  http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/pretty?q=pretty
> 
> As such, I would say using pretty as an adjective for fairly,
> considerably, or other, as in the sentence "That was pretty easy." is
> well established and accepted English. So far there have been three
> dictionary entries saying it is valid English, including one of the
> most widely accepted.
> 

No doubt His Rantingness has already widened the scope of his spampaign to 
include the world's lexicographers and the billion or so English speakers they 
represent, with the aim of liberating them all from their sad misapprehensions 
about what constitutes valid colloquial English, and by example, their 
burdensome preoccupations with spelling and punctuation, and their crippling 
fear of malapropisms and homonyms.


John   
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