In chat, when I view actions for a message that I have already starred, I can choose:

Unstar as interesting

This sentence should be:

Unstar as uninteresting

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6  
If it was uninteresting, it wouldn't have a star – random May 27 '11 at 13:03
No, it shouldn't. If anything, "Remove interesting star" – Won't May 27 '11 at 15:14

2 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

The phrase seems perfectly fine, to me.
When you star a post, you star it as interesting; the opposite action is "unstar it as interesting."

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Every time a language question ends up getting settled via an English.SE post I find myself disagreeing with them. "Unstar as uninteresting" just sounds bad – Michael Mrozek May 27 '11 at 14:15
1  
@Tim No, it isn't. @Kosmonaut comment to the answer for your question explains exactly why that answer is not correct. – kiamlaluno May 27 '11 at 15:02

Unstar is not in any dictionaries I have at home, so getting into an English language discussion about how it is used doesn't really seem to make sense.

At the very minimum without even thinking about it, you are using "un" to reverse a process or action in this context.

Star ("clicked a button to mark a message as as interesting")
Unstar should be ("I am reversing my previous action")

Which would not make sense still, because I cannot reverse a click.

If anything it should be similar to next section

"You have starred this message."
★ Remove star to undo

That way it doesn't end up in a nonsensical battle over the use of a nonexistent word.

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I am not arguing about unstar, but about the lack of negation. – Tim N May 27 '11 at 14:46
Don't see how not, the whole sentence goes as one. I am reversing the action of marking the item as starred. I am reversing the action of marking the item as not starred. Which really makes sense ? You cannot argue the use of negation of "interesting" without first handling the use of star/unstar. – phwd May 27 '11 at 14:56

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