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Usenet Posted 16 years ago
Usage

Is there a difference between squished and squashed.

I bought a new video card for the computer that would allow me to connect my tv to a second output, and while the image on the tv was correct, eventually the image on the monitor became compressed. The top inch and bottom inch were black and the part in the middle was squished. ATI help lists four possible problems prominently, one of which is "If the image on your monitor changes or looks squashed".

Squished seems to me to be more precise than squashed, but I don't know why.
What say you, English mavens?

Posters should say where they live, and for which area they are asking questions. I was born and then lived in Western Pa. 10 years
Indianapolis 7 years
Chicago 6 years
Brooklyn, NY 12 years
Baltimore 26 years
  

Top answer

[nq:1]I bought a new video card for the computer that would allow me to connect my tv to a second ... Squished seems to me to be more precise than squashed, but I don't know why. [/nq] In BrE, "squished" would, I think, be considered to be slang, and probably not be used in a technical document.

  • [nq:1]I bought a new video card for the computer that would allow me to connect my tv to a second ...
  • Squished seems to me to be more precise than squashed, but I don't know why.
  • [/nq] In BrE, "squished" would, I think, be considered to be slang, and probably not be used in a technical document.
  • With best wishes, Peter.
  • Peter Young, (BrE, RP), Consultant Anaesthetist, 1975-2004.
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7 Answers
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[nq:1]I bought a new video card for the computer that would allow me to connect my tv to a second ... Squished seems to me to be more precise than squashed, but I don't know why. What say you, English mavens?[/nq]
In BrE, "squished" would, I think, be considered to be slang, and probably not be used in a technical document.
With best wishes,
Peter.

Peter Young, (BrE, RP), Con
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[nq:2]I bought a new video card for the computer that ... but I don't know why. What say you, English mavens?[/nq]
[nq:1]In BrE, "squished" would, I think, be considered to be slang, and probably not be used in a technical document.[/nq]
I agree.
I would have guessed that "squish" was a modern-ish invention, and I would have been wrong.
OED:
squish, v.
(Imitative: cf. SQUIS
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[nq:1]I bought a new video card for the computer that would allow me to connect my tv to a second ... Squished seems to me to be more precise than squashed, but I don't know why. What say you, English mavens?[/nq]
While you're at it, my dialect has a similar word pronounced "squooshed" with "oo" as in "book". Do others (AmE and/or BrE) have a word with that pronunciation? And if so, how do you
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[nq:2]In BrE, "squished" would, I think, be considered to be slang, and probably not be used in a technical document.[/nq]
Even squashed doesn't sound very technical. If they wanted to be technical they'd say compressed.
[nq:1]I agree.[/nq]
I agree too, except it's a computer help file and computer folk aren't so insistent on standard English. For example, Eudora has a button named Bla
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[nq:1]While you're at it, my dialect has a similar word pronounced "squooshed" with "oo" as in "book".[/nq]
Here's how the words are shaded in my mind: Squashing compresses something fairly uniformly, with a lot of force, usually in one direction at a time, and usually not by very much. Papers are squashed into a notebook, or clothes into a suitcase. Squishing squeezes something irregularly so
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[nq:1]Here's how the words are shaded in my mind: Squashing compresses something fairly uniformly, with a lot of force, usually ... something harder to flatten would have to be squashed flat. Squooshing envelops something soft, like a pillow or a cat.[/nq]
I agree with you about squish, noting that as a noun it's the sound made by shoes tramping through soft mud. Squoosh is the sound made when
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[nq:1]Squished seems to me to be more precise than squashed, but I don't know why.[/nq]
I recently heard a CBC report from Haiti mentioning a "squished" car; I thought they should have said "squashed". To me "squish" implies (or presupposes) softness and perhaps wetness in the the object, and has a slightly childish flavour. The latter may be because I perceive it to be more obviously onomatop

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