Talk:significant

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Latest comment: 6 years ago by Equinox in topic Pronunciation with /ɡ/
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When meaning important, do you say "significant *of* something" or "significant *for* something"? Could some native speaker please add an example? — This unsigned comment was added by 80.171.126.14 (talk).

  • It depends. Usually, something is significant to a certain person or situation. Therefore, we discuss the significance of something, and say that it is significant for a certain reason. Hope that helps. — This unsigned comment was added by 216.77.197.61 (talk).

Significantly overused[edit]

"Significant" is one of the most overused jargon words in business writing and journalism. It is generally used either (a) when the writer means "important" but has also used that word too often or (b) when the writer is too lazy to find a meaningful qualifier or quantifier such as a statistic or is writing something too vague to lend itself to quantification. For example, "this project will have a significant impact on sales growth" is much easier to write, but much less meaningful, than "this project will increase sales growth by 3-5%". — This unsigned comment was added by 195.212.29.67 (talk).

Pronunciation with /ɡ/[edit]

Can someone comment on the recently added pronunciation with a /ɡ/ instead of a /k/? Is it regional, colloquial, rare or something like that? Ungoliant (falai) 14:04, 12 March 2018 (UTC)Reply

Seems a bit like having /d/ in US tomato. I don't think it should be there. Equinox 18:53, 12 March 2018 (UTC)Reply