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This has always been my understanding. Why would I state that I could care less about something which I am trying to express that I don't care much about at all?

There's the theory that it implies you could care less, but that would require effort. I don't buy it. It's pretty easy not to care about something, in fact, I think it takes no effort at all. It's not like I'm straining myself by not caring about Joe Smith's new job in northern Minnesota. In fact, I couldn't care less.



In fact, starting now I think I'm going to start using "I could care less" liberally to communicate its literal meaning. Frinstance:

"My car broke down, and I could care less!"

"I broke my finger, and I could care less!"

"My girlfriend left me for being so goddamn pedantic all the time, and I could care less!"


"My girlfriend left me for being so goddamn pedantic all the time, and I could care less!"

I wonder if there's an opportunity to be had in creating a dating site for linguistic pedants, purists, and grammar nazis. I'm thinking a required literacy test to join, and auto-banning the account of anyone who commits more than some threshold limit of grammatical errors.

</probably joking>


The personal ads in the London Review of Books might fit your needs. I was browsing the book mentioned in this article last week:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6592990




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