I went to look at a bike recently and it was described as mint !!
The term "mint" as an adjective was coined (no pun intended) by numismatists to indicate that a coin looked as if it had just been minted. Other collectors quickly adopted the term. Unlike terms such as "good" or "excellent" which could mean different things to different people, "mint" has a very precise meaning. An object described as in "MINT CONDITION" means, literally, that the item looks as if it just came off the assembly line in the factory; that there is not a single defect of any kind in the product. It is in the BEST possible condition a product can possibly be in.
So the next time you put down mint in a description and its got mud on it then describe it as dirty then again it depends on how good you were educated like !!
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Took the Queens Shilling and disappeared for 23 Years !!
yes this annoys the hell out of me also and another word that is over used is the word RARE
When i had a 205 i was looking about and someone was selling some GTI wheels and he used this to describe wheels that you can get pretty much anywhere and there are
literally thousands of them Fooking winds me up something chronic