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Quentin Finck - literally, basically, quite frankly, like I said

Wasted Words
National Committee to Stamp-out the Word Basically
*sigh*

literally, basically

lit·er·al·ly li(t'?r-?-le-
adv.
  1. In a literal manner; word for word: translated the Greek passage literally.
  2. In a literal or strict sense: Don't take my remarks literally.
  3. Usage Problem.
    1. Really; actually: “There are people in the world who literally do not know how to boil water” (Craig Claiborne).
    2. Used as an intensive before a figurative expression.

USAGE NOTE   For more than a hundred years, critics have remarked on the incoherency of using literally in a way that suggests the exact opposite of its primary sense of “in a manner that accords with the literal sense of the words.” In 1926, for example, H.W. Fowler cited the example “The 300,000 Unionists … will be literally thrown to the wolves.” The practice does not stem from a change in the meaning of literally itself—if it did, the word would long since have come to mean “virtually” or “figuratively”—but from a natural tendency to use the word as a general intensive, as in They had literally no help from the government on the project, where no contrast with the figurative sense of the words is intended.


ba·si·cal·ly ba-'si(-k?-le-, -kle-
adv.
  1. In a basic way; fundamentally or essentially: Throughout the ordeal, he remained basically the same.
  2. For the most part; chiefly: They basically do what they are supposed to.

quite frankly, like i said