What I mean is like for example, a person having “gravitational pull” or someone making a “quantum leap” makes no sense to anyone who knows about physics. Gravity is extremely weak and quantum leaps are tiny.

Or “David versus Goliath” to describe a huge underdoge makes no sense to anyone who knows about history, because nobody bringing a gun to a sword fight is going to be the underdog but that’s essentially what David did.

I’m looking for more examples like that.

      • Victor
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        122 months ago

        So sub-par doesn’t really imply the golf way of being good, but actually means below equal/average? Then I’m fine with using below par as a negative.

        • @Obi@sopuli.xyz
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          42 months ago

          I’ve never seen sub-par used to mean positive, always as “under average”.

          • Victor
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            22 months ago

            Same, but the implication was that it was supposedly being used incorrectly, but then it turns out it is being used correctly after all.