Jenny
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The one that screams out at me in print is which when it should be that. And the increasing misuse and overuse of the word iconic drives me NUTS.
The one that screams out at me in print is which when it should be that.
take vs bring/brought
accept vs except
and everyone's favorite, your vs you're
The one that screams out at me in print is which when it should be that.
I stopped watching The View when Sheri Sheppard said she "was not in agreeance with what Beyonce did". Why do people make up words?
Har-de-har AND har!!!! (didn't know how to punctuate that one)We're really doing good in this thread.
take vs bring/brought
Seeing incorrect grammar (or spelling) in printed books drives me crazy. I don't like those in newspapers either but at least the np's are usually under time pressure.
Homeschooling mom here; emason is correct: "One" is the subject, "faces" is the correct verb; "in four" and "of our children" are prepositional phrases. "Hunger" is the direct object.
Had a quick look - it does refer to a few specific instances. I'm guessing those which could refer to an individual body or a number of individuals - their example is Police which I'd agree with depending upon context.
No fair. You stole my (other?) BIGGEST grammar pet peeve. AARRGGHH! You can't bring something somewhere unless "I" am there. (Hey, that kind of rhymed. I'm channeling Dr. Seuss or Schoolhouse Rock.)
Holy cow! Who knew? Obviously not this Scrufflet! My only excuse is that I'm Canadian and not completely familiar with Southern dialects. I guess I can forgive Sheri for that.
History of agreeance.
Some black and Southern dialects often include words from the 18th and 19th centuries that are not in standard use, but aren't made up terms, either.
I'd call,"Hunger" an indirect object, object of the verb,"Face" but what do I know? I'm no grammarian.
"Should of" makes me SO stabby.
I lit a candle for this one ... http://www.poynter.org/news/mediawire/244240/ap-removes-distinction-between-over-and-more-than/
I have heard a kitten dies every time "should of" or "could of" is used instead of should and could have. Poor, poor kittehs...
Honestly, it scares me that I am homeschooling them, but I am actually one of those scary homeschoolers who practices academic rigorWiery is right and I am wrong. I woke up this mornining thinking more clearly. It's a good thing I'm not schooling Wiery's children.
Thinking.......isn't should've a contraction of should have. It just sounds like should of? I say should've or could've or would've. (And now the word "should" looks so funny to me........) They don't get spellcheck red wavy lines under them here, so they must be real words. I was starting to doubt myself for a second. Now, if you see it in writing with the of, that's a bad, bad thing!! Then there's always the slang expression of regret - "shoulda, woulda, coulda".
EVERY TIME somebody on t.v. says less - I yell "FEWER". What t.v. network used to say "less commercials"? Made me want to scream!!!
Here's a simple way to explain it to someone without the "technical" singular/plural grammar lesson - less thing, fewer things.
DH equates culling his precious books with killing kittens. He's the same guy who knows better than to mention skinning cats.Yeesh, first we're skinning cats, now we're killing kittens? Oh, the humanity!
They also rule in our house! So leave the kitties out of it!DH equates culling his precious books with killing kittens. He's the same guy who knows better than to mention skinning cats.
Felines rule in our house.