Comment by inanutshellus
12 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."
12 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".