4 Comments
User's avatar
Nancy-Laurel Pettersen's avatar

LOL, Just last week I was in a fancy restaurant. In the restroom, the instruction to the employees was to wash your hands prior to returning to work. Exactly, "prissy," I thought, in a fancy font, a fancy frame. And then I saw below in a much smaller plain font, "Don't be gross. Wash your hands too."

More LOL, I just googled "don't be gross" and came up with a lot of signs for purchase with that slogan, but none with the "prior" '-) mandate to employees.

Obray's avatar

Even Merriam Webster agrees with you:

"Although prior to is occasionally criticized as a pretentious way of saying before, it is well-established in formal contexts, such as the annual reports of corporations. In some of these contexts, it serves to emphasize the procedural nature of something. "

Hal Davis's avatar

Prior to the post, I hadn't given it much thought. That condition continues.