What I mean is like for example, a person having “gravitational pull” or someone making a “quantum leap” makes no sense to anyone who knows about physics. Gravity is extremely weak and quantum leaps are tiny.

Or “David versus Goliath” to describe a huge underdoge makes no sense to anyone who knows about history, because nobody bringing a gun to a sword fight is going to be the underdog but that’s essentially what David did.

I’m looking for more examples like that.

  • Ideonek@lemm.ee
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    17 hours ago

    There is a “learning curve” to it - used as "it will be easier after a while. It’s the other way around. Learning curve is when you learn like crazy at first, but than after you knock out all the easy wins your progres slows dramaticaly.

    • RisingSwell@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      16 hours ago

      Idk it makes sense to me. The learning part is the hard part, once you’ve past the learning curve doing the task is easier because you’ve already learned the stuff you need.

      • Ideonek@lemm.ee
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        9 hours ago

        If that’s how it works for you, sure. But that’s not the point. I don’t claim that people learn one way or another, or Wich part is easy. The point is that a “steep learning curve” means something specific in psychology, and people use it to describe something different.