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Culture War Roundup for the week of December 19, 2022

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Yeah, exactly. I get a lot of sentences like:

Though Treatment A showcased a reduction of cholesterol, Treatment B inclined levels of cholesterol's diminishing trends.

Treatment C's effects on decreasing cholesterol were lessened than the lowerings of Treatment C.

Verbs of increase aren't as confusing, I guess because there are fewer of them. Basically just increase, raise and rise in most cases (maybe soar if you're being dramatic), and a lot of ESL speakers use "arise", but they mean "rise". A lot of them think "augment" = "increase" for some reason, which I guess it kinda does but not in like 99% of the cases it's used in.

The other biggies I see a lot of misuse:

by/with/through/via

way/route/method/means (seriously, scientists, "way" is rarely correct in journal articles, just don't use it)

tool/equipment/kit

discuss/interview/survey (and talk/speak/say though that doesn't come up too much in my articles)

I also always think it's funny when they have obviously looked up synonyms of a common English word and chose something unreasonably archaic, like using "gelid" for "cold".

Anyway, the AI sometimes tries to fix these, but often doesn't fix them right or even fixes correct ones sometimes.