Cinnabon August 26, 2022 Share August 26, 2022 “All y’all” will never fail to make me laugh. 1 1 1 Link to comment
Browncoat August 26, 2022 Share August 26, 2022 I do use "y'all" all the time. And I use "all y'all" if there's a big group of people and I want to emphasize that everyone is included. But "y'all" is never singular, and it's also not "ya"ll" or any other spelling. I've heard "you-uns" in east Tennessee. 1 1 Link to comment
Bastet August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 I think "y'all" is a useful addition to a language that doesn't have a distinct second person plural pronoun. "You guys" is gendered, and the others are very region-specific, so "y'all" for the win in casual speech/writing. And "all y'all" is just fun, as in "fuck all y'all". 1 6 2 3 Link to comment
Lugal August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 1 hour ago, SweetieDarling said: I'm from the Phila area. If I am reading the word, I will pronounce it "creek", but if I am talking about one, like the Neshaminy, or the small that ran through our neighborhood, it's a "crick". It's interesting how context-dependent creek vs. crick is. 1 hour ago, SweetieDarling said: I grew up with "you guys" (suburbs) and will only use "y'all" in jest (f*#@ all y'all!). I find regional dialects and pronunciations fascinating. I also grew up in Southeastern PA and mostly heard you guys or occasionally youse guys. But there is something about the phrase "f*ck all y'all" that just so perfectly distills the sentiment. 1 hour ago, Cinnabon said: “All y’all” will never fail to make me laugh. I have read that some dialects, y'all has become singular and all y'all is the new plural. 1 1 1 Link to comment
SuprSuprElevated August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 When discussing or addressing a group (2 or more), informally, I default to folks. I have no doubt that this grinds the gears of some, but I desperately dislike 'guys' or 'you guys', and I'm not comfortable with y'all, being a Yankee 'n all. Feels like appropriation. 😁 1 1 3 3 Link to comment
SoMuchTV August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 3 minutes ago, SuprSuprElevated said: When discussing or addressing a group (2 or more), informally, I default to folks. I have no doubt that this grinds the gears of some, but I desperately dislike 'guys' or 'you guys', and I'm not comfortable with y'all, being a Yankee 'n all. Feels like appropriation. 😁 Well it definitely beats “you people”. 3 3 3 Link to comment
Leeds August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 7 hours ago, bluegirl147 said: I try to make sure my posts are well written and thoughtful but sometimes all that needs to be said is oh for fuck sake. My fellow View watchers will understand. Since this is a grammar police thread, I hope it's okay to ask whether that shouldn't be "for fuck's sake"? 1 1 5 1 Link to comment
Cinnabon August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 4 hours ago, SuprSuprElevated said: When discussing or addressing a group (2 or more), informally, I default to folks. I have no doubt that this grinds the gears of some, but I desperately dislike 'guys' or 'you guys', and I'm not comfortable with y'all, being a Yankee 'n all. Feels like appropriation. 😁 I agree. I settled on “you all” because I’m not southern and “y’all” would be inauthentic coming from me. 15 minutes ago, Leeds said: Since this is a grammar police thread, I hope it's okay to ask whether that shouldn't be "for fuck's sake"? Yes, lol. What truly irritates me is “the fuck.” Why did “what the fuck” need to be shortened? 🤦♀️ 1 2 Link to comment
shapeshifter August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 1 hour ago, Cinnabon said: Yes, lol. What truly irritates me is “the fuck.” Why did “what the fuck” need to be shortened? 🤦♀️ Because the thoughtlessness of those whose actions or decisions triggered our exasperation is not worthy of more than a 2-word reaction? Note deliberate decision to use sentence fragment above. 4 3 Link to comment
bluegirl147 August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 5 hours ago, Cinnabon said: Yes, lol. What truly irritates me is “the fuck.” Why did “what the fuck” need to be shortened? 🤦♀️ The fuck is better than da fuck. 3 1 Link to comment
Milburn Stone August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 (edited) I, a Northerner, find myself using "y'all" when I'm talking to the New Orleans branch of the family. You know how people will unconsciously use bodily gestures to signal affinity? Like, if you're sitting across from someone whose hands are folded, you'll fold yours without even knowing you're doing it, and vice versa? It's the same with language. In this case it may not even make sense, because: 1) I don't know if they even say "y'all" in New Orleans. 2) The New Orleans branch of the family is not even from New Orleans. They moved there from the mid-Atlantic states 25 years ago. I find myself saying "y'all" to them anyway. I suppose it's semi-conscious. I'm really saying, "I get that you live in the South now, and I forgive you." 6 hours ago, Cinnabon said: What truly irritates me is “the fuck.” Why did “what the fuck” need to be shortened? Yeah, that one strikes me as really inauthentic when I hear it. Like, the speaker doesn't really talk that way, they heard someone else say it somewhere and thought it was cool, and now they want to seem cool too. (I apologize for using the plural pronoun in that last sentence. I suppose I've surrendered.) Edited August 27, 2022 by Milburn Stone 1 Link to comment
shapeshifter August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 35 minutes ago, Milburn Stone said: …and now they want to seem cool too. (I apologize for using the plural pronoun in that last sentence. I suppose I've surrendered.) No apology needed. 4 Link to comment
SuprSuprElevated August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 6 hours ago, Cinnabon said: Yes, lol. What truly irritates me is “the fuck.” Why did “what the fuck” need to be shortened? 🤦♀️ The Fuck kitty gives no fucks about your fucking opinion. (please know that I kid here, just couldn't resist) 13 Link to comment
Cinnabon August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 4 hours ago, bluegirl147 said: The fuck is better than da fuck. Definitely! 4 hours ago, Milburn Stone said: I, a Northerner, find myself using "y'all" when I'm talking to the New Orleans branch of the family. You know how people will unconsciously use bodily gestures to signal affinity? Like, if you're sitting across from someone whose hands are folded, you'll fold yours without even knowing you're doing it, and vice versa? It's the same with language. In this case it may not even make sense, because: 1) I don't know if they even say "y'all" in New Orleans. 2) The New Orleans branch of the family is not even from New Orleans. They moved there from the mid-Atlantic states 25 years ago. I find myself saying "y'all" to them anyway. I suppose it's semi-conscious. I'm really saying, "I get that you live in the South now, and I forgive you." Yeah, that one strikes me as really inauthentic when I hear it. Like, the speaker doesn't really talk that way, they heard someone else say it somewhere and thought it was cool, and now they want to seem cool too. (I apologize for using the plural pronoun in that last sentence. I suppose I've surrendered.) Also, it’s “WTF,” damn it! 🤣 Not everything needs to be shortened or turned into an acronym/initialism. 1 1 Link to comment
Bastet August 27, 2022 Share August 27, 2022 18 hours ago, SoMuchTV said: Well it definitely beats “you people”. 1 4 Link to comment
Cobalt Stargazer August 31, 2022 Share August 31, 2022 On 8/26/2022 at 6:13 PM, SoMuchTV said: Well it definitely beats “you people”. On 8/27/2022 at 12:24 PM, Bastet said: 1 3 Link to comment
Leeds September 1, 2022 Share September 1, 2022 (edited) I'm feeling grumpy today so I am using this forum to put out a few of the kind of phrases from cooking shows that irritate me. "To the (ingredient) I'm going to add" "Today I made for you" "Into a large pan, add the . . . " And this one isn't related to grammar, but I feel the need to add this latest example of linguistic ignorance: "raw mango doesn't bode well with a dessert" Edited September 1, 2022 by Leeds 1 1 Link to comment
shapeshifter September 1, 2022 Share September 1, 2022 36 minutes ago, Leeds said: "raw mango doesn't bode well with a dessert" Perhaps you would feel better with: The presence of raw mango 🥭 does not bode well for a dessert. The others don’t bother me. 3 Link to comment
Bastet September 1, 2022 Share September 1, 2022 55 minutes ago, Leeds said: "Today I made for you" At least it's "I"; what drives me nuts is when a chef - who had no sous chef or any other assistance in preparing or cooking - presents the dish to judges by saying, "Today we made for you ..." (Even those who prefer "they" as their third person pronoun use "I" in the first person, so it's not an impressive number of non-binary chefs competing on these programs that's causing this trend.) 2 2 Link to comment
Leeds September 1, 2022 Share September 1, 2022 "A spokesman for the All England Club said Djokovic was one of five players this year asked to change or adjust footwear to comply with the rules. He did not have the names of the other three players." Reuters Because at Wimbledon five minus three now equals one. 1 1 2 Link to comment
SuprSuprElevated September 1, 2022 Share September 1, 2022 14 minutes ago, Leeds said: "A spokesman for the All England Club said Djokovic was one of five players this year asked to change or adjust footwear to comply with the rules. He did not have the names of the other three players." Reuters Because at Wimbledon five minus three now equals one. I would put that on Reuters. 2 Link to comment
JustHereForFood September 1, 2022 Share September 1, 2022 4 hours ago, Leeds said: "Today I made for you" What is wrong about that, if I may ask? Link to comment
Leeds September 1, 2022 Share September 1, 2022 6 minutes ago, JustHereForFood said: What is wrong about that, if I may ask? Of course you can ask! To me it just sounds so pretentious. Why can't they just say "I made"? 1 Link to comment
JustHereForFood September 2, 2022 Share September 2, 2022 31 minutes ago, Leeds said: Of course you can ask! To me it just sounds so pretentious. Why can't they just say "I made"? Thanks. I thought that there is something gramatically incorrect, but I couln't figure out what it is. 1 Link to comment
Milburn Stone September 3, 2022 Share September 3, 2022 I think "into a large pan, add the" is not only correct, but probably superior to "add the...into a large pan." On a subtle level, it conveys the need to have the large pan at the ready before you come to the stove with the ingredient. The word order mimics and strengthens the proper order of events, which is helpful. It also subtly underlines the importance of the pan being a large one, not a medium-sized or small one--crucial information if you don't want a mess to clean up. Clauses matter. 2 1 2 Link to comment
AstridM September 3, 2022 Share September 3, 2022 On 9/1/2022 at 7:29 PM, Leeds said: Of course you can ask! To me it just sounds so pretentious. Why can't they just say "I made"? I agree that it’s awkward. 1 Link to comment
Milburn Stone September 8, 2022 Share September 8, 2022 (edited) Highly relevant to our general discussion: https://freddiedeboer.substack.com/p/if-youre-a-living-language-type-then Key sentence: "When literally becomes just an intensifier, it joins hundreds of other terms that occupy that position, and something is lost." Edited September 8, 2022 by Milburn Stone 5 1 Link to comment
elle September 10, 2022 Share September 10, 2022 (edited) On 8/26/2022 at 1:46 PM, Cinnabon said: I grew up in the Midwest with “pop,” then moved to California in my 20s. Since then I’ve always used “soda” and will never go back, lol. I live in the Midwest again now and cringe when I hear “pop.” I grew up in the Midwest too. I feel like I used “pop” and “soda” interchangeably then, but only ‘soda’ now. I moved to the Southwest in my teens and I never got used to hearing the occasional “coke” used for any sugary carbonated drink. I think most of us were transplants so “soda” was the go to word. On 8/26/2022 at 4:54 PM, Browncoat said: I rarely say, "ain't", and even then I'm usually quoting a movie. My favorite "ain't" quote is from "Support Your Local Sheriff" -- James Garner asks Harry Morgan why there aren't any bars on the jail cell, and Harry replies, "We had to order them, and they ain't arrove yet." I do a lot of purchasing for work, so "they ain't arrove yet" gets a lot of use. I love this (and that movie)! How fun for you that you get to use this. Does anyone recognize the quote? Edited September 10, 2022 by elle Link to comment
Browncoat September 10, 2022 Share September 10, 2022 8 hours ago, elle said: I love this (and that movie)! How fun for you that you get to use this. Does anyone recognize the quote? Hardly ever, even when I tell them it's from a movie and explain the scene. They laugh when I say it, though. I used it just yesterday! 1 1 Link to comment
Leeds September 11, 2022 Share September 11, 2022 A (professional) chef on a national TV show show just talked about "privileging the peas" and went on to add insult to injury by talking about "A better kind of trumpet of the pea possibility than the previous dish." (I rewound because I thought I must have misheard. Unfortunately not.) My only hope is that these pretentious dicks watch their performances at home surrounded by friends and family who go on to relentlessly mock them. 1 2 1 Link to comment
Lugal September 12, 2022 Share September 12, 2022 22 hours ago, Leeds said: A (professional) chef on a national TV show show just talked about "privileging the peas" and went on to add insult to injury by talking about "A better kind of trumpet of the pea possibility than the previous dish." (I rewound because I thought I must have misheard. Unfortunately not.) Someone's seriously seeking validation for their superb alliteration skills. 1 1 Link to comment
meep.meep September 13, 2022 Share September 13, 2022 On 9/10/2022 at 6:51 PM, Leeds said: A (professional) chef on a national TV show show just talked about "privileging the peas" and went on to add insult to injury by talking about "A better kind of trumpet of the pea possibility than the previous dish." (I rewound because I thought I must have misheard. Unfortunately not.) My only hope is that these pretentious dicks watch their performances at home surrounded by friends and family who go on to relentlessly mock them. That's like Posh Nosh! She would always embarrass the vegetables. Link to comment
shapeshifter September 15, 2022 Share September 15, 2022 https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-09-14/henry-fuhrmann-times-editor-dies 1 Link to comment
Zella September 30, 2022 Share September 30, 2022 (edited) This cracked me up, and I thought all of you would appreciate it as well. Edited September 30, 2022 by Zella 12 4 Link to comment
shapeshifter September 30, 2022 Share September 30, 2022 5 minutes ago, Zella said: This cracked me up, and I thought all of you would appreciate it as well. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 That would be my first words too!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 2 1 3 Link to comment
Cinnabon September 30, 2022 Share September 30, 2022 55 minutes ago, Zella said: This cracked me up, and I thought all of you would appreciate it as well. I would absolutely be thinking that! 2 1 4 Link to comment
Annber03 November 6, 2022 Share November 6, 2022 So I'm watching "48 Hours" at the moment, and I saw a little promo headline in the corner advertising a topic that would be covered on the next episode of one of the CBS morning shows. This was the headline: "Social media's affects on elections." 3 1 Link to comment
shapeshifter November 6, 2022 Share November 6, 2022 54 minutes ago, Annber03 said: So I'm watching "48 Hours" at the moment, and I saw a little promo headline in the corner advertising a topic that would be covered on the next episode of one of the CBS morning shows. This was the headline: "Social media's affects on elections." Given that Social Media seems to be taking on a life of its own, I'm not so sure that's wrong.😉 4 Link to comment
Milburn Stone November 6, 2022 Share November 6, 2022 8 hours ago, shapeshifter said: Given that Social Media seems to be taking on a life of its own, I'm not so sure that's wrong.😉 AIAIAIAIAIAIAIAIAIAI! 1 2 Link to comment
SuprSuprElevated November 6, 2022 Share November 6, 2022 11 hours ago, Annber03 said: "Social media's affects on elections." I think one is a twitching left eyelid. 2 1 Link to comment
danderson400 November 28, 2022 Share November 28, 2022 On 6/20/2015 at 6:03 PM, bmasters9 said: This opening of a 1986 rerun of the 1980-82 game show Bullseye with the late Jim Lange (that show was rerun on the USA Network, which no longer reruns game shows) had Jim opening by having announcer Jay Stewart "introduce our first two players," only to have Jay say "our champion." The mistake in there is in Jim saying "our first two players," which would normally only be used on the first episode of a new show, not on future shows within the run (outside of TPIR, which always says "the first four contestants"). Normally on Joker's Wild, Jack Barry would have Jay Stewart or later on, Charlie O Donnell introduce "the champion and the challenger" and that was a proper way of doing it that way. 1 Link to comment
shapeshifter December 8, 2022 Share December 8, 2022 Wait. Who was wearing handcuffs? And were the handcuffs a fashion choice? “Heinrich was arrested at his house in Frankfurt, led out by balaclava-clad policemen in handcuffs, sporting mustard-coloured corduroy trousers and a tartan-patterned jacket, with long grey hair…” (reuters.com/world/europe/heinrich-xiii-prince-suspected-plotting-be-german-kaiser-coup-2022-12-07). 8 Link to comment
SoMuchTV December 8, 2022 Share December 8, 2022 8 hours ago, shapeshifter said: Wait. Who was wearing handcuffs? And were the handcuffs a fashion choice? “Heinrich was arrested at his house in Frankfurt, led out by balaclava-clad policemen in handcuffs, sporting mustard-coloured corduroy trousers and a tartan-patterned jacket, with long grey hair…” (reuters.com/world/europe/heinrich-xiii-prince-suspected-plotting-be-german-kaiser-coup-2022-12-07). Oooh, so much here! After you figure out the deal with the handcuffs, do you think you can get me picture of the tartan-patterned jacket, with long grey hair? 5 Link to comment
shapeshifter December 8, 2022 Share December 8, 2022 10 hours ago, shapeshifter said: Wait. Who was wearing handcuffs? And were the handcuffs a fashion choice? “Heinrich was arrested at his house in Frankfurt, led out by balaclava-clad policemen in handcuffs, sporting mustard-coloured corduroy trousers and a tartan-patterned jacket, with long grey hair…” (reuters.com/world/europe/heinrich-xiii-prince-suspected-plotting-be-german-kaiser-coup-2022-12-07). 2 hours ago, SoMuchTV said: Oooh, so much here! After you figure out the deal with the handcuffs, do you think you can get me picture of the tartan-patterned jacket, with long grey hair? Here's the outfit at the time of arrest: But here is the accessorized outfit: Link to comment
Lugal December 8, 2022 Share December 8, 2022 On 12/6/2022 at 6:02 AM, SweetieDarling said: Serves her right for ruining the snake's holiday. 4 Link to comment
Grrarrggh December 9, 2022 Share December 9, 2022 Very few people on HGTV know how to pronounce foyer, or know the definitions of the words "flow" and "cute". If I have to hear about "natural sunlight" one more time.... 1 5 Link to comment
shapeshifter December 9, 2022 Share December 9, 2022 7 hours ago, Grrarrggh said: Very few people on HGTV know how to pronounce foyer, or know the definitions of the words "flow" and "cute". If I have to hear about "natural sunlight" one more time.... Apparently there are many valid ways to pronounce foyer (see our discussion here) but yeah, "natural sunlight" does not say what they think it does. Link to comment
SuprSuprElevated December 12, 2022 Share December 12, 2022 No. 16 is everything, lol. Credit - @GHScorpiosRule 3 1 7 2 Link to comment
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