On a similar theme, "season" seems to have replaced "series" when referring to television programmes of a recurring nature. Although admittedly "series" could lead to confusion as to whether you're referring to one set of episodes, or the programme as a whole (which also has an Americanism, "show".
I don't think many younger people would use "imbibe" to describe partaking in alcoholic beverage?
Ugh, don't get me started!
I agree with your last point though.
I guess one thing with 'guys' when used to address a mixed-sex group of people is that we don't really have many alternatives. In the USA I've heard, 'Hi folks' but the word 'folks' is really used much in the UK. Of the other alternatives, 'Hi everyone' sounds a bit formal these days. You have 'hi people' which would probably work, but seems to be very unusual.
Other words you rarely hear amongst younger people: 'whom' and 'fewer'.
The use of "less" instead of "fewer" grates particularly, in a similar manner to the phrases "I'm good", "You did good", etc. It's as if we need to do away with using different words to mean (roughly) the same thing depending on their context within a sentence. It's too difficult for a generation raised on FIFA and Call of Duty.
As with
@ABB125, I shall happily admit that I am not a typical member of the forum regarding language use, nor indeed, regarding what I think is "normal" (it's partially hyperbole, as I don't know that many "normal" young people, and what "normal" young people I do know have my perceptions of them diluted somewhat by quite a selective memory. It's partially the fact that I don't know many people full stop. And it's partially the fact that I have been a curmudgeonly old man since primary school). But my main concern, partially prompted by this thread, is that the English language is moving into a phase where it's increasingly less designed to be spoken. New phrases seem to be coined on how easily they can be abbreviated and written on a keyboard. I will freely admit that I'm probably a) exaggerating and b) wrong, but it seems to me a dreadful indictment of how little correct grammar matters to the modern world, and the new generations, that children now seem to be taught how to use electronic devices before they can read and write. Excuses can be made that it does teach them how to read and write, but, in my opinion, that doesn't address the fundamental issue: the phone or computer that is the modern child's model toy is not suited to reading and writing in a traditional sense. Everything is about typing quickly to get your elbows in before everyone else's on "group chat", and most things online are written to capture the attention quickly and present everything in small bites. Naturally, this is permeating through to the spoken and the physical. Part of it is the use of a diverse range of sources, with their own dialectal quirks available for the masses to read and slip into their turn of phrase at the tapping of their thumbs. I don't think that that's a bad thing, but, nevertheless, I agree with what William Shakespeare nearly said - "by the tapping of their thumbs, something wicked this way comes." As the nature of phone text is so different from speech, the latter is becoming almost archaic, and, where, previously, hard and fast rules were taught, they are being forgotten - such as the issues surrounding the use of "less" and "good" where other words should be substituted.
That turned into a bit of an essay/rant - so I'd be interested to learn: does anyone agree with me? Or have I lost/bored you all? Or was I just flying into an unnecessary passion and overly conservative (small c, no political undertones intended) mindset?