English is a language which has over 1,000,000 words, and you want to nitpick when 'tivoing' is a verb? Sheesh, I thought I was anal... I said sorry, if you'd like to keep harping, feel free. But at that point I'd like to see your linguistic degree, and study history in relation to English. I happen to be taking it as a minor, so if you want to get into that side of things I'd be happy to.
English is a language where we use words which don't exist, until 'recognized' by some group which decides what words to 'add' to the language.
Would you like me to go on about language? Or can we let the matter drop?
No, we don't want you to 'go on about language', but we would prefer if you would desist, both in your continuous and egregious bringing forth of malapropisms and catachreses, and your stultifyingly tedium-inducing self-promotional tirades. We can all wax lyrical, some of us more accurately than others. On an internet martial arts forum, it's about using plain English to communicate your ideas, and not about who can induce migraine in the reader the quickest.
Taking something as a minor means nothing. There are people on this board *and in life* who know more than you do. About everything. You need to accept that. I am an English teacher, have been for a long time. Still wouldn't say I was an expert. You probably should know that, in another 15 years, the qualifications that you're working on now will be completely irrelevant, as working experience will have taken priority.
There are far far fewer than 1 million words in English, especially if you do not count words twice where they have more than one meaning.
Words are added to the dictionary when they coined and come into common use in a particular community, then the usage and meaning spreads. This is not an excuse for someone trying to make themselves sound clever to misuse words that do exist or worse still, to make up their own words. It's small wonder that you are often misunderstood. Try ditching your pretensions, and using plain English to communicate your points. People will understand you better, and you won't be perceived as such a pompous, arrogant young upstart.
Here's what the OED has to say:
"The Second Edition of the 20-volume Oxford English Dictionary contains full entries for 171,476 words in current use, and 47,156 obsolete words. To this may be added around 9,500 derivative words included as subentries. Over half of these words are nouns, about a quarter adjectives, and about a seventh verbs; the rest is made up of exclamations, conjunctions, prepositions, suffixes, etc. And these figures don't take account of entries with senses for different word classes (such as noun and adjective).
This suggests that there are, at the very least, a quarter of a million distinct English words, excluding inflections, and words from technical and regional vocabulary not covered by the OED, or words not yet added to the published dictionary, of which perhaps 20 per cent are no longer in current use. If distinct senses were counted, the total would probably approach three quarters of a million."