When did basketball announcers start saying, "He's great at scoring the basketball." It's among the stupidest phrases out there, and every broadcaster I've heard lately says it. Why? How did it get started? "He's great at scoring." That's it. You can't score without the basketball. "Scoring the basketball" has to go.
And so many people use the equally redundant phrase "end result." Stop it. Please. "Result" is "the end." That's why it's the result.
There are more, but I'll stop with this one. Now that baseball season is upon us, stop with the stupid, pretentious phrase, "He had three RBI." No he didn't. "He had three RBIs." Any initialism is made plural by adding an "s" at the end. It doesn't matter what words the initials stand for, whether those words are singular or plural. All that matters is the long-standing, common sense rule to add an "s" to the end of any and all initialisms to make them plural. So please, it's "one RBI--three RBIs." End rant. Thank you.
And so many people use the equally redundant phrase "end result." Stop it. Please. "Result" is "the end." That's why it's the result.
There are more, but I'll stop with this one. Now that baseball season is upon us, stop with the stupid, pretentious phrase, "He had three RBI." No he didn't. "He had three RBIs." Any initialism is made plural by adding an "s" at the end. It doesn't matter what words the initials stand for, whether those words are singular or plural. All that matters is the long-standing, common sense rule to add an "s" to the end of any and all initialisms to make them plural. So please, it's "one RBI--three RBIs." End rant. Thank you.