• Zagorath@aussie.zoneOP
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    12 days ago
    Blue

    Means there’s a lot of a thing.

    Pack is fairly obvious.

    “A whole host of reasons” is a fairly common phrase to mean someone has a lot of reasons for a decision.

    “Sea” is a bit less common, but you might say something like “he looked down upon a sea of friendly faces”.

    “Drove” is honestly one I would consider wrong, but only on a technicality. I would consider this sense of drove to be a “lost singular”, in the way that “evitable” is a lost positive (from the real negative “inevitable”) or “whelmed” is a lost form from under- and overwhelmed. You never see “a drove of” something, but you do see something “in droves”.

    • PaupersSerenade@sh.itjust.works
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      12 days ago

      Great explanation!

      Tap for spoiler

      I do agree with you regarding drove vs droves, but that’s something Connections does sometimes. I think they sacrifice accuracy to avoid giving a hint (in this case that it’s more than one). I can’t name other examples off the top of my head, but I’ve definitely noticed it before.

      • Zagorath@aussie.zoneOP
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        12 days ago

        I have definitely seen it do things that I didn’t agree with mainly because they weren’t a part of my dialect before (I can’t recall a very good example of that, but one that is kinda similar but not quite was when they used “deli” to mean a place that sells sandwiches: where I live, delis tend to sell the meats that would go on a sandwich, but not the bread…so like ham, salami, that kind of thing), but I don’t think I’ve ever seen an example where the use in their preferred dialect it still required some fudging to get it to work.