Comment by inanutshellus
9 hours ago
Yes and to be clear, one uses "TFA" to imply annoyance that TFA hasn't been read.
e.g. "TFA covers this already."
9 hours ago
Yes and to be clear, one uses "TFA" to imply annoyance that TFA hasn't been read.
e.g. "TFA covers this already."
That’s not something I wanted to imply. It can also stand for "the fine article". Is there a better shorthand for "the article linked at top of the page" / "the original article"?
TFA works fine either way. It's OK that it is subject to interpretation.
Nope, one simply says "the article".