Audio Cliche Usage Guide


To help all those in need, I propose the Audiogon Audio Cliche Usage Guide.
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Audio Cliche #1 - "My lost is your gain". Correct usage, "My loss is your gain".

Lost means missing, or no longer possessed. If you still own the unit, then you still possess the unit, and it is not lost.

Loss refers to the decrease in the amount of money resulting from re-selling the item at a lower price on Audiogon.
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Audio Cliche #2 - "I sold all my gears." Correct usage, "I sold all my gear."

Gears refers to several multi-toothed wheels used in motors and machinery.

Gear is a collective term that means all the components that comprise a system...like an audio system.
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Your turn...
tvad
I especially like it when after one "burns" in a piece of equipment assuming your house didn't burn down with it, that the sound bloomed. In all these years, I haven't gotten a single blossom out of my stuff.
Secondly, will some stop the guy selling those CDs that they are not "Rared". Is this some way of trying to say they have become rare buy an action taken by others that we were previously unaware of?
My usage of the language cannot be faultered, I'm only a novelist at the writing game, and my day job is quite hective.
The "wife walked in" story. As the story goes, she remarked instantly about the wonderful effect of the tweek you just installed without her knowledge.

I think that the "bleeding ears" cliche for bad sound has worn itself out. How about a "my dog ran out of the house howling" story to take its place.