Public service announcement

Jul 01, 2008 17:11

Regularly means 'occurring at standard intervals'. Frequently means 'occurring often'. They are not synonyms.

I've just been on a work away day. 'Regular meetings' are only a cure for communication problems if they are also frequent, damnit.

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Comments 5

wimble July 1 2008, 18:51:35 UTC
But so much more useful when your boss wants to organise regular unpleasant meetings :)

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onebyone July 1 2008, 20:55:20 UTC
Maybe they're emphasising the to be regular. Meetings can be too frequent, but they can't be too regular. A meeting that occurs at a random time every day is useless, because no bugger would turn up to it.

Also: even regular, frequent meetings are not exactly the penicillin of communication problems.

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triskellian July 1 2008, 21:06:13 UTC
Yes, poor wording on my part; didn't mean to imply that frequent meetings alone cure anything. In fact it amazes me that anyone thinks they do ;-)

(Also, given that we have various part-timers working different patterns, too-regular does actually risk being exclusive.)

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zandev July 2 2008, 07:33:22 UTC
Also, having regular meetings can help keep them frequent, as there is less excuse to put them off or 'forget' about arranging them.

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secretrebel July 2 2008, 08:49:04 UTC
There's a story about a vicar meeting two members of his congregation at Christmas.
"You're not regular communicants, are you?" he says.
"Oh yes we are!" the couple reply indignantly. "We're here every Christmas!"

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