Please sir, can I have some more(ish)
Posted at: 2:53 PM by Hammad
We have sweets in the studio today. Not just any sweets - old school sweets like Chewits and Refreshers :)
Whilst we started chomping our way through them, one of the guys said a pet-hate phrase of mine:
"These sweets are really moreish"
I can't decide if I like the word "moreish" as it just doesn't seem to fit with either the use of "more" or even "ish". Consider this definition of "ish":
Ish. Kind of, sort of. Multi-purpose suffix for everything. Can also be used alone--usually with a waggle of the dominant hand.
http://www.pseudodictionary.com/-ish
With that in mind, attaching it to "more" just doesn't work does it? Played out a little further, you could look at it this way.
Example 1:
(Confident context)
"What colour are those sweets" "Red"
(Unsure context)
"What colour are those sweets" "Reddish"
Example 2:
(Confident context)
"How are you feeling?" "Cold"
(Unsure context)
"How are you feeling" "Coldish"
Both these examples work fine in either context right? So how why can "more" not be used in the same context successfully? The word moreish doesn't adhere to the rules you would normally apply to 'ish' and also can't be used to add uncertainty to a confident statement. To make it worse, the phrase "These are really moreish" isn't actually an uncertain statement at all! It's very much a confident one that states somebody's clear opinion; no room for question.
So, now that I've mused over this, can I have some more sweets guys?
"no-ish, they've all been eaten"
Sigh :(




The diagram here is lifted straight out of our business plan and shows exactly how we compare to other agencies throughout the UK. Thankfully our clients agree that we've got the balance right, so we intend to continue this winning formula for a very long time.