fox: linguistics-related IPA (linguistics)
fox ([personal profile] fox) wrote2010-05-17 04:29 pm

also, while we're on the subject

Let's say you want to accomplish a task that most people would normally believe requires going to a particular location. Getting a rockin' hairdo, for example, might necessitate going to a salon. Collecting the mail might be impossible without going outside, if that's where your mailbox is.

If you manage to accomplish this task without going to the presumably-required place, you have done so "without stepping [wherever]" or "without setting foot [wherever]". Please, please, PLEASE stop saying you've done things "without *stepping foot [wherever]" RIGHT THIS MINUTE.

Thank you.
liviapenn: miss piggy bends jail bars (remains sexy while doing so) (Default)

[personal profile] liviapenn 2010-05-17 08:59 pm (UTC)(link)

Why? There's nothing wrong with saying "to step foot" or "stepping foot." It's perfectly proper English.
liviapenn: miss piggy bends jail bars (remains sexy while doing so) (Default)

[personal profile] liviapenn 2010-05-17 09:04 pm (UTC)(link)

(here's one example from 1870)
liviapenn: miss piggy bends jail bars (remains sexy while doing so) (Default)

[personal profile] liviapenn 2010-05-18 04:09 am (UTC)(link)

*shrugs* A lot of common phrases *sound* weird if you think about them too hard, but that doesn't make them wrong. "Imply" and "infer" are two separate words with completely opposite meanings, and it is demonstrably incorrect to confuse them (there is a lovely bit in a Nero Wolfe novel where he burns a dictionary because it says you CAN use them interchangeably, and that was in 1962) but "step foot upon" and "set foot on," imo, are just two different ways of saying the same thing.

Actually we might be both right; now that I look, "step foot UPON" or "stepping foot upon" is much more common (and that phrasing goes back to the 1830s). But nobody says "upon" these days, so it's evolved into "stepping foot ON" which does sound a bit off.
thalia: photo of Chicago skyline (Default)

[personal profile] thalia 2010-05-17 09:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Do you think? It sounds very unidiomatic to me.