Going forward: Difference between revisions
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A voguish, [[throat clearing]] expression which means ''from now on''. | A voguish, [[throat clearing]] expression which means ''from now on''. In a kinder time, modish wordsmiths said, “[[henceforth]]”. Some still do. | ||
When you adopt the future tense, it’s a fair assumption — Time’s arrow doing its miserable thing and reminding us there’s but one way out of here — you are thinking of those points in time which haven’t happened yet, to the exclusion of all those which have. | When you adopt the future tense, it’s a fair assumption — Time’s arrow doing its miserable thing and reminding us there’s but one way out of here — you are thinking of those points in time which haven’t happened yet, to the exclusion of all those which have. |
Revision as of 15:54, 20 June 2018
A voguish, throat clearing expression which means from now on. In a kinder time, modish wordsmiths said, “henceforth”. Some still do.
When you adopt the future tense, it’s a fair assumption — Time’s arrow doing its miserable thing and reminding us there’s but one way out of here — you are thinking of those points in time which haven’t happened yet, to the exclusion of all those which have.
“From now on, I will be eating bananas” merely implies you haven’t been doing so until now. “Going forward, I will be eating bananas” suggests something more profound: that, before now, it had not even occurred that they might be worth eating; that you are author of a beneficent new insight which will better illuminate the world.
The odds of such inspiration emanating from lips uttering the expression “going forward” is low.
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