I find myself often winging it with “themself/themselves” and it seems to be like themselves is always colloquially correct when there are multiple preceding nouns you’re referring to…
Otherwise if there’s only one antecedent or whatever, its themself
Be gentle haha
I’m not sure if I understood the question correctly, but ‘factoid’ is the most commonly misused word that I know of. It’s not a synonym for ‘fact’; it actually means the exact opposite. A factoid is a misconception so widely believed that people take it as a fact. You could even say that the word ‘factoid’ itself has become a factoid.
Example of a factoid: The great wall of China can be seen from space. No it can’t.
Might have been an idea to factoid-check that claim in a dictionary before posting because it’s not really correct.
Factoids are to facts what humanoids are to humans. It does not mean the “exact opposite” at all.
From here:
The obvious rejoinder: if Norman Mailer wanted his neologism to keep the meaning he intended for it, he should have been more careful about etymology. The “oid” suffix makes the new definition more logical than his own one.
Counter-example: “homophobe”, which is illogical but has stuck anyway because it’s succinct.
Interesting points otherwise.
It’s the original meaning of the word, coined by Norman Mailer in 1973.
The second definition in your quote confirms that factoid can mean a widely-accepted false fact.
I had no idea. Thanks!