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admit that I now sometimes use some of these phrases myself, or at least don’t look so quizzical when I hear others around me use them. One that I haven’t used, but which became popular during the recent recession, is “right-size” as in “we have experienced a reduced demand for corporate finance advice, so needed to right-size that department”. In reality that means down-size. That means making people redundant. So right-sizing sounds better. That last sentence reminds me of my current pet hate; starting an answer to a question with “so.” People appearing as guests on the Today programme seem to have a particular penchant for it. An example – Q: “Could you explain what further help is needed in the areas most affected by the civil war? A: “So, at the moment there are 1,000 people trapped in a hilltop village…..etc” I’m not sure whether that counts as jargon but it gets it off my chest. Lawyers and business people are, however, are probably not the worst offenders regarding jargon. The gold medal goes to the medics, who manage to combine obscure terms with an insistence on abbreviations and illegible handwriting. Some doctors have allegedly used abbreviations to hide what they really think about their patients’ conditions, such as; ABITHAD -  nother Blithering Idiot A Thinks He’s A Doctor. ETK(T)M - Every Test Known To Man FLD - Funny Looking Dad. GOK - God Only Knows PIP - Pyjama Induced Paralysis. TMB - Too Many Birthdays. TTGA - Told To Go Away. And then there are those medical notes that contain a mix of Latin, Greek and randomly selected symbols, which present a challenge to our clinical negligence team in terms of putting them in the right order and understanding what they say. I’m not sure why lawyers were told some while ago that Latin phrases were no longer to be used in presenting legal argument in Court, but medics are able to use them at will in their notes and correspondence, but I’m not complaining, having barely scraped through my Latin O level many years ago. Lawyers and business people, however, are probably not the worst offenders regarding jargon. The gold medal goes to the medics So (notice that one?), if we send you a letter or e-mail that can only be understood with the aid of a dictionary, Wikipedia or an aunt schooled in the top stream at Cheltenham Ladies’ College, please do let me know, and I will reinforce our message of plain speaking to the author. Unless it’s from me of course, in which case mea culpa autem quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur. (I am to blame, but anything said in Latin sounds profound). By Chris Randall 5