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Notes -
you might have the meaning of nonplussed backward - if so its a common mistake no biggie just wanted to mention in the spirit of being helpful
edit: oh no apparently now the dictionary says that in "north america" it can informally mean its opposite now. i guess i'm too late.
Wait, what? When did that change happen? The parent comment to this one is the first time I can remember seeing it used in the informal North American sense, and until reading your edit, I assumed CertainlyWorse got it wrong as well.
i think people who learn it by osmosis through reading often think it means something like unphased, and now enough have used it that way that it's officially a definition. i think i'm fine with it, not a linguistic prescriptionist
I think you mean unfazed here.
ha you're right, bit of an ironic blunder there
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Interesting. I've always used it in the North American sense, which is weird because I'm usually a stickler for using the Queen's English.
I’ve got some bad news for ya bud…
(Well I suppose you didn’t specify the Queen Regnant’s English so…)
Old habits die hard. Elizabeth was much more likeable.
Hasn’t every King Charles dissolved parliament? I’d be rather disappointed if this Charles breaks tradition.
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