jujube
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I will admit that I get tired of grammar misuse but when I get upset, I just pat myself softly and say "there, they're, their" and I feel better instantly.
I will admit that I get tired of grammar misuse but when I get upset, I just pat myself softly and say "there, they're, their" and I feel better instantly.
What about using "set" for "sit"?
I recently read a book full of grammatical errors. It always makes me cringe, as it shouldn't pass the proof-reading.I blame this on too few people actually reading books anymore. Reading your phone won't replace the subliminal education value of reading a book.
Why do we hyphenate they're when it's just as easy to type they are.I'm with you all the way Ronni. I've been complaining about this problem forever. One of the dumbest ones I've seen in recent years is using "then" and "than" interchangeably.
Americans are becoming increasingly illiterate in their native language. I suspect this is the same for most people here, but I could not graduate from high school (class of '68) without passing English -- which was a required course right through 12th grade. I have no idea what's going on today, but it sure isn't like when I was in school.
Some images I've made over the years that I used to post, but people got too upset with me so I don't do it anymore. It's a losing battle:
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That doesn't bother me at all. I just say to myself no ladies around they just spelled laddie wrong when I order.The one that sends me right over the edge is the misuse of the apostrophe; I even see it misused on signs around here. One that used to cause smoke to come out of my ears was the sign at a local bar that advertised "Ladie's drinks half price." Ladie isn't a word. Lady is the singular and ladies is the plural. It you want to advertise half price drinks for women, it should be "Ladies' drinks." GRRR.
Also, if you are writing of a family with the surname of Carson, it is not the Carson's; it's the Carsons.
Also cursive writing tells how old you are. I don't think it is even taught anymore.Camp: Post 35
Correct!
The way you talk, write (and mannerisms) is as good as fingerprints in telling others where your from, how (and what)
you think.
Your verbal and written behavior is your ethos.
(We have lost the complications within ethos, complex definition.)
Reminded me of a friend from school- for some reason, she thought even proper names that ended with "s" needed an apostrophe. One day she was filling out a form that asked for her father's first name, and instead of writing Charles she wrote Charle's. I said that wasn't accurate- unless she was talking about something that belonged to a person named Charle. She wasn't amused!The one that sends me right over the edge is the misuse of the apostrophe; I even see it misused on signs around here. One that used to cause smoke to come out of my ears was the sign at a local bar that advertised "Ladie's drinks half price." Ladie isn't a word. Lady is the singular and ladies is the plural. It you want to advertise half price drinks for women, it should be "Ladies' drinks." GRRR.
Also, if you are writing of a family with the surname of Carson, it is not the Carson's; it's the Carsons.
Well no "There's 2 in that sign'. O.K. There are a 2 in the sign?You forgot two of my favorites:
"There's two," instead of there are two.
"I'll come over your house." Flying?
And I get a laugh when someone is testifying in small-claims court & says, "I axed her" instead of "I asked her." (popular with black people). Really funny when the judge corrects her.
And "We conversated."
Camp: Post 35
Correct!
The way you talk, write (and mannerisms) is as good as fingerprints in telling others where your from, how (and what)
you think.
Your verbal and written behavior is your ethos.
(We have lost the complications within ethos, complex definition.)
On a Zoom call, (for those of you who aren't familiar Zoom is a cloud-based video conferencing service you can use to virtually meet with others) so lots of people on the screen. In the course of that half hour video call, I heard the following:
I heard: "I could care less" (I COULDN'T care less!) "But I digest." (but I DIGRESS!) "All the sudden" (All OF A sudden!) and "A blessing in the skies" (A blessing IN DISGUISE!) Dear God, people! <SNIP>
I recently read a book full of grammatical errors. It always makes me cringe, as it shouldn't pass the proof-reading.
The one that sends me right over the edge is the misuse of the apostrophe; I even see it misused on signs around here. One that used to cause smoke to come out of my ears was the sign at a local bar that advertised "Ladie's drinks half price." Ladie isn't a word. Lady is the singular and ladies is the plural. It you want to advertise half price drinks for women, it should be "Ladies' drinks." GRRR.
Also, if you are writing of a family with the surname of Carson, it is not the Carson's; it's the Carsons.
I worked freelance as a proofreader in my younger years. I am sometimes still employed to edit, though that's only occasionally these days.Agree totally. Same for articles. When someone writes so poorly that you have to re-read every sentence to grasp its meaning, then I don't waste any more time on it.
And a lot of posts and casual things written online are OBVIOUSLY not proof-read before posting. If people would only do that, it would be a big help.
I worked freelance as a proofreader in my younger years. I am sometimes still employed to edit, though that's only occasionally these days.
Proofreading is an exact skill. I was trained to read a text at bare minimum three times. The first time starting with the last word and working my way through the article or chapter to the first word. That would catch any errors in spelling. The second time through, read from first word to last, looking for the less obvious errors, in particular plurals and contractions like an 's where there should be no apostrophe, or vice versa, the ..n't words, words like their, there and they're etc. I would stop at every single instance of those kinds of words and read the sentence for context and then red-pen as necessary. And then the third time through, again from front to back, for flow, punctuation etc. And becuase I'm so anal, I usually read it again a 4th time, occasionally picking up something I missed earlier.
These days the word processing programs take care of a lot of that. But I think people rely too much on the on-board tools of word processing. The program can tell if "whether" was spelled correctly, but won't differentiate if it should have been "whether," "weather," or "wether." Unless it's specifically designed to edit documents, like Grammerly for example, it won't let you know that a semi-colon would have been better than a comma, or a comma should have been used where there was a period, or there are too many run on sentences.
Proofreading and editing often overlap. A good editor will also automatically proofread, and a good proofreader can't help but edit a bit.