Burninate.  Seems like a meta tag, and I can't seriously believe that *anyone* will ever google, "Language-Lawyer".

I wrote this post two years ago; and it seems to be as true today as it was two years ago.  Here's a present day screen shot of the first 'fold' for Language lawyer:

![enter image description here][1]

As you can see, the first two links are simply duplicates of one another; the third link is another definition, the fourth is a Stack Overflow tag (not particularly helpful, unless you're actually looking for a language-lawyer question -- and even then, you get to scroll through a few pages to find what you're looking for), and the fifth is about sign language.

Notice that all the sponsored ads are about finding a lawyer.  I didn't include results 6-10 because they are even less relevant than results 1-5 (if such a thing were possible).

This is the very definition of a meta tag -- it's a tag that can't tell you about the problem on its own. A commenter brought up 'civilians' and '`UItableViewCell`'.

Here are the first five google results for `UItableViewCell`:

![UItableViewCell][2]

As you can see, all of the search results hone in exactly on a language, a problem, and even a video(!).  While I wouldn't suggest having `UItableViewCell` be the only tag on a question; it would get us much farther than having `language-lawyer` be the only tag on a question.

People like it, I get that. But it *is* a meta tag.  

There's also the argument that

> People are following the tag deliberately, using it as a marker of questions that are interesting to them. That's an exceptionally good indication of utility.

People also used to [ask others to "ignore the fun tag"][3], so they could keep the fun tag around.  The problem is; while these questions may be 'fun' they're not really in the scope of Stack Overflow.

Likewise; the Language-Lawyer tag serves the interest of a very small group of people who:

1. Enjoy arguing language semantics.
2. Like to post teaser questions just to argue language semantics.
3. Have these questions show up in the moderator queue due to flags.

3 alone is a good reason to remove the tag; and #1 and #2 also are outside the scope of Stack Overflow.  Not to mention, these questions usually fall this very basic tenet of our site:

> Focus on questions about an actual problem you have faced. Include details about what you have tried and exactly what you are trying to do. 


  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/3C29I.png
  [2]: https://i.sstatic.net/TUU2L.png
  [3]: https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/3283/what-kind-of-place-should-there-be-for-contest-questions