I’ve just read an article about Helen Mirren. In it we find that she hates the word ‘feisty’ and was particularly annoyed when she was described as such.
I don’t mind ‘feisty’ – it’s never been a word I’ve thought much about. The word I have taken a great dislike to is ‘spritely’, which is how my gardener described me a couple of weeks or so ago. Until that moment I had no opinion about the word but when Graham described me as ‘spritely’, I found myself hating the word with a passion!
It’s funny how seemingly ordinary words can affect you. When I was young (19 or 20), my boyfriend used to address me in letters as ‘Dear Smell’. I assumed then that it was a term of endearment. I think if someone addressed me with that now, I would be greatly offended!
‘Elderly primagravida’ – this describes a woman who is pregnant for the first time at age 35 or after or whose previous pregnancy was in her early 20’s. I suppose if it’s a ‘medical term’, it would be silly to take offence but when it’s applied to you and you are a young 38, you don’t go home and boast about it! Apparently, now women who are over 35 and pregnant can also be described as having a ‘geriatric pregnancy’!
We all have talked about ‘sweet old ladies’, I imagine. I guess there are some in the world, but I agree with Helen Mirren about the word ‘sweet’ being used to describe an attractive couple walking along holding hands. Babies are sometimes ‘sweet; sleeping toddlers might be ‘sweet’; an 8 year old girl may look ‘sweet’ and I may once have thought the word was a compliment when applied to me, but after 10 or 11, girls are highly unlikely to be ‘sweet’. I know I haven’t been sweet since I was a child (if I was!) even if my name is (literally!)
(The article was in The Times on 22 August, 2025 and written by Dominic Maxwell)

I agree with you Candy! I also hate ‘had a fall’ with a passion! At what age do you suddenly change from ‘tripping over’ to ‘having a fall’? The phrase is SO aging. I also recently heard Biddy Baxter who produced Blue Peter described as ‘formidable’. Would that phrase be used to describe a man in her position? I think not. Grrrrr…..
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Yes, I agree! ‘Having a fall’ only happens to old people – think of babies learning to walk – no one says, “ Oops, baby’s had a fall.”! And I would really hate to be called formidable, unless it was by a French man. ‘Formidable’ in French just isn’t the same!😂
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Both my mum and her sister had babies in their 40s and our family records show in Ancestry.com,that a woman had a baby in her 50s! (proving a family legend)
Apparently the most disliked word is “moist”
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And I bet your mum, her sister and the unnamed woman in your past were all very spritely!😂
We were actually discussing the word ‘moist’ last night and how some people dislike it! (It doesn’t bother me at all!)
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