Meaningless intensive, "I was like at this party."
"Bogus" means "not genuine," but I hear it used to mean "no way."
He didn't know if he was coming or going (approaching or proceeding).
My wife once noticed my contraction "I've" and asked me where in the world I got such a word.
A churchgoer told me that "judgement" must be spelled "judgment." The spell checker must be a churchgoer too, but both are standard variants of each other.
Those who believe that the King James Version is inspired will call the King's English "proper" English. They have no answer as to what Bible English Christian were to use before 1611, and why KJV-only-ists speak modern English. All dialects are a matter of time and place. The Kings English was spoken in Shakespeare's time mostly near London. There were many other dialects of English in that same era.
Fields of discipline have their own nomenclatures. In experimental psychology I learned that an "optical illusion" is one that occurs in the eye, such as a person experiencing blindness when first walking into a very dark room. An example of a "visual illusion" is how the brain interprets those pictures that we commonly call "optical illusions."
"Are you going or not?" ...eventually became "are you going or what?"
It seems like the newscasters always use "persons" when I expect to hear "people."
What is the possessive case for Russ? Russ' - Russ's or Russes?