I’ve seen “let alone” used on Lemmy a good number of times now and, at least when I noticed it, it was always used incorrectly. It’s come to a point where I still feel like I’m being gaslit even after looking up examples, just because of the sheer amount of times I’ve seen it used outright wrong.

What I’m talking about is people switching up the first and last part. In “X, let alone Y” Y is supposed to be the more extreme case, the one that is less likely to happen, or could only happen if X also did first.

The correct usage: “That spaghetti must have been months old. I did not even open the box, let alone eat it.”

How I see it used constantly: “That spaghetti must have been months old. I did not eat it, let alone open the box.”

Other wrong usage: “Nobody checks out books anymore, let alone visits the library.”

Why does this bug me so much? I don’t know. One reason I came up with is that it’s boring. The “wrong” way the excitement always ramps down with the second sentence, so why even include it?

I am prepared to be shouted down for still somehow being incorrect about this. Do your worst. At least I’ll know I keep shifting between dimensions where “let alone” is always used differently or something.

  • TempermentalAnomaly@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    I wanted to highlight that this use of “let alone” is only for the negative construction where “let alone” means the same thing as “much less”.

    In a more positive construction “let alone” means the same as “not to mention” while both not letting it alone and still mentioning it. The earliest reference in the OED is of this construction:

    “I didn’t hide, nor wouldn’t from any man living, let alone any woman.”

    Before this use, to “let alone” was to “leave alone” and dates back to the old English.

    I’m not sure when the negative construction of “let alone” first emerged, but it’s no more than two hundred or so years old.