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DancingSweetie said:It also drives me crazy when people say "sherbert" instead of "sherbet".
That's not bad but the one I absolutely hate is when axe is replacing ask. :eusa_doh:
Regards,
J
DancingSweetie said:It also drives me crazy when people say "sherbert" instead of "sherbet".
Cobden said:I find it somewhat irritating when people use "two star general" etc when describing British and Commonwealth military officers, because they're not compatable. The most junior general rank in the British Army is a Lt-General, where as it is the second most junior general officer rank in the US, because a Brigadier in the UK is not a General rank (it is a senior colonel).
Air Boss said:I wonder how many British officers I promoted while serving in Europe.
Senator Jack said:I'll agree, 'Whom shall I say...' idiomatically sounds better, but if people want to ditch 'Whom' altogether, then just be done with it and don't bother withe hyper-urbanisms.
Senator Jack said:Consulting Fowler's, legitimate uses of 'who', I find, are listed, many of which I don't cotton to. (ending with a prep - no comments please)
RadioHead said:Oh, golly! Never go to Newfoundland, then. "I wants a beer", "I needs to sleep", etc. Drives me nuts! Luckily... I don't have to hear it too often.
"RadioHead"
Lady Day said:Do people not know how to speak good no more?
Im not only commenting on proper grammar, or putting yourself before the other in a sentence ("Me and him . . " :rage: ), but there are certain phrases in the English language (slang aside) that just irk me to no end.
Examples:
"They were all the same, except for the blue one."
NO then THEY were not all the same its, "The blue one was different from the others."
Or being redundant when talking of an amount of something. "I have one single ring on this finger." GRRRRRRRRR
Or the need to fill necessary silence with the word "like"
Cant you use "an example would be", or "for instance" or NOTHING AT ALL?!
Or the dreaded "I dont know," which has become the ultimate trail off in any poorly worded or thought out conversation of us twenty somethings.
Heaven help us.
My mother was a teacher, so this sort of schoolin' was ever constant in my home.
*sigh*
LD
see what I think of at 2 in the mornin . . .
EL COLORADO said:You make me want to drop a bunch of toothpicks in front of you.
Marc Chevalier said:The title of this thread drives me crazy. It should read, "That which you say drives me crazy." So there!
.
Marc Chevalier said:The title of this thread drives me crazy. It should read, "That which you say drives me crazy." So there!
.
EL COLORADO said:You are both wrong. It should read,..
"That which you express in words, causes me great distress".
Mr. Sable said:I very much like to speak colloquially, though. I like to throw in a few 'them things' and 'ain'ts' in once in a while
I imagine kids growing up with text messenging are going to seem outright retarded (as we used to say in the good o' days before political correctness) in later life.