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Why Grammar Matters: A Place To Discuss Matters Of Grammar


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12 hours ago, dargosmydaddy said:

And poem lines don't need to end with any punctuation, if you wouldn't normally put it there in a "regular" sentence.

Poems lines don't need to end with any punctuation at all, even if you would normally put it in a 'regular' sentence.  That's the absolute beauty of poetry.  

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(edited)

This is more about spelling than grammar, but there's no spelling-related thread here.  A client just replied to and email one of my colleagues sent; it was colleague's third reminder Client was replying to.  Client who did the response is the co-owner and he called out two of his employees asking that they respond 'IN A TIMLEY MANNER!!!!".  Timley Manor sounds like the Crawleys' neighbours in Downton Abbey.

Edited by fastiller
punctuation - ironic, eh?
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On 1/9/2025 at 8:11 AM, EtheltoTillie said:

I would leave the comma. It adds a little pause that I think is appropriate. 

Grammar does not have to be exact in poetry 

Thanks for this. It rang true for me.
For any who wondered about the "final" wording 
(others feel free to ignore)
I decided the long E sound of the first line of "Sloop John B" was iconic for me, so:

  • Gramma came over and we,
    Built a house out of couch cushions,
    And in a pretend car,
    We went out on pretend missions,
    Stopped for lots of pretend animals,
    …who were crossing the road,
    Then later we came to know
    …mixing only blue and yellow playdough,
    To make a snake that became a gecko      
    …with arms,
    Can be nicer than mixing
        all colors into brown.

 

I want to chop a syllable out of:

  • Stopped for lots of pretend animals

Maybe:

  • Stopped lots for pretend animals

— or is that grammatically incorrect? 
It seems like it. But maybe it's just odd?

 

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4 minutes ago, shapeshifter said:

I want to chop a syllable out of:

  • Stopped for lots of pretend animals

Maybe:

  • Stopped lots for pretend animals

— or is that grammatically incorrect? 
It seems like it. But maybe it's just odd?

I don't think it sounds as good to me personally, but more than anything it subtly changes the meaning. Rather than stopping (however many times) for lots of pretend animals, it is now stopping a lot of times for pretend animals (however many of them there are). It would depend on where you want your emphasis on what there is a lot of--the number of animals or the act of stopping. 

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28 minutes ago, Zella said:

Rather than stopping (however many times) for lots of pretend animals, it is now stopping a lot of times for pretend animals (however many of them there are).

LOL, I think it's sometimes stopping a lot for the same animal and sometimes stopping for different animals.

By the time I'm done with this, I probably could have embroidered it, heh.

 

Edited by shapeshifter
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19 minutes ago, isalicat said:

That is how I feel about "impactful"...I still don't think that is a real word. (la la la la - fingers in my ears)

Very rarely does a buzz word bother me, I think because my Dad tried to be aware of them and use them into his 80s. As the first US-born child of immigrants who were very Old World in their style and spoke with accents, he wanted to appear to be as cool as Frank Sinatra, and buzz words were a way into that personna, as well as a means of demonstrating later in life that he was not an "old fogey." 

But it's different now. There are so many transient neologisms now that I don't think it's necessary to keep up with them unless, maybe, for pub trivia nights.

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On 1/15/2025 at 2:32 PM, shapeshifter said:

Very rarely does a buzz word bother me, I think because my Dad tried to be aware of them and use them into his 80s. As the first US-born child of immigrants who were very Old World in their style and spoke with accents, he wanted to appear to be as cool as Frank Sinatra, and buzz words were a way into that personna, as well as a means of demonstrating later in life that he was not an "old fogey." 

I'm that guy plus a layer of irony. Depending who I'm talking to (yes, I know it's whom, but I'm not that pedantic) I seem to enjoy dropping in the "latest word all the kids are saying" but with a shared understanding that I know exactly what I'm doing. If that makes it any better.

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Most people are not intellectuals. The last thing a tertiary educated intellectual are is John or Jane Q. Public.

On 1/15/2025 at 11:42 AM, SoMuchTV said:

That one takes me back! Many many years ago, one of my father’s go-to verses was

Adam and Eve and pinch-me

Went down to the river to bathe. 

Adam and Eve were drownded. 

Who do you think was saved?

 

Well, pinch me obviously but - OW!

3 hours ago, Ancaster said:

You think you're being intellectual by using big words like albeit.  You're not.

  "These taste like buttery french fries, albeit they are look completely different."

Not sure where you found the quote, but maybe it was ChatGPT generated?
Or “albeit” was just an autocorrect for a misspelling of although??
Or maybe they were trying to avoid using “but” and stumbled upon “albeit” — which does support your conclusion as to how “albeit” wound up in that sentence.

2 hours ago, shapeshifter said:

On Jeopardy! last night, during the interviews, Ken Jennings said, “Because you're younger than me…”

Since it was Ken Jennings, I wondered if he in part chose to use "me" instead of "I" just to bug pendantics like us.

Looking into this, it gets crazy.  When than is used as a conjunction it governs the nominative case, "younger than I am."  But when used as a preposition it governs the oblique case, "younger than me."  However, some think that as a preposition it should take the nominative as well ("younger than I"), but then it must also be followed by whom, (as in "younger than whom") which violates that rule.🤯

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3 hours ago, shapeshifter said:

On Jeopardy! last night, during the interviews, Ken Jennings said, “Because you're younger than me…”

Since it was Ken Jennings, I wondered if he in part chose to use "me" instead of "I" just to bug pendantics like us.

 

35 minutes ago, Mondrianyone said:

Pedants.

Also "younger than me" is perfectly acceptable. It's less stuffy than "younger than I am young."

 

There's an online (Patreon) radio program* I listen to where we listeners** along with the host intentionally call ourselves pendants when we point out pedantic errors.  In fact we have  'pendants corner'.

* Shaun W Keaveney's Community Garden Radio.  Longtime listeners to BBC Radio 6 Music will recognize him from his shows there.  He's also got a weekly show on BBC2 on Fridays at 2300.
** Gardeners.

 

3 minutes ago, Lugal said:

Looking into this, it gets crazy.  When than is used as a conjunction it governs the nominative case, "younger than I am."  But when used as a preposition it governs the oblique case, "younger than me."  However, some think that as a preposition it should take the nominative as well ("younger than I"), but then it must also be followed by whom, (as in "younger than whom") which violates that rule.🤯

Crazy?  Like the entirety of the English language.  English has something like 200+ irregular verbs.  By comparison, Irish has 11.

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3 hours ago, fastiller said:

There's an online (Patreon) radio program* I listen to where we listeners** along with the host intentionally call ourselves pendants when we point out pedantic errors.  In fact we have  'pendants corner'.

* Shaun W Keaveney's Community Garden Radio.  Longtime listeners to BBC Radio 6 Music will recognize him from his shows there.  He's also got a weekly show on BBC2 on Fridays at 2300.
** Gardeners.

Haha.  Did you have "pedant" pendants made up to wear while in the corner?

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