Huh?
Using a cliche is one thing (usually, the sign of a lazy writer); using it incorrectly only increases the irritation factor. According to Wikipedia, a perfect storm is the "simultaneous occurrence of weather events which, taken individually, would be far less powerful than the storm resulting of their chance combination."
But that's what happens with cliches. People become so accustomed to using them that they get sloppy. So stay alert to those hackneyed words and phrases, and get rid of them from your writing. Business correspondence, in particular, is a haven for the hackneyed.
My nominations for retirement include:
- The Mother of all...
- At the end of the day...
- Think outside the box...
- The bottom line is...
- I can get behind that...
And by the way, I think Sebastian Junger's 1997's book, "The Perfect Storm," is a terrific read.
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