Tony in Tarzana
My Mail is Forwarded Here
- Messages
- 3,276
- Location
- Baldwin Park California USA
Wossamatta U? lol
LizzieMaine said:I think it's the decline of active reading, more than anything else, that contributes to all this. The number of people who never read as much as a daily newspaper, let alone serious magazines or books, is increasing all the time. And the more people take all their information and entertainment from electronic media, the more they're immersed in a world where everything, including language, must be reduced to the lowest common denominator. And the more that happens the more the traditional media must be dumbed down if they want to retain any readership at all.
When I was working as a reporter, I was told I had to restrict my vocabulary to an eighth grade level. Today I suspect it's even lower -- the average paper nowadays reminds me of the sort of thing I was seeing in My Weekly Reader when I was nine.
Lady Day said:Walking through a door: "This door is so heavy."
Waiting at the cross walk: "This is the longest light."
Ordering food: "I have to pay for extra cheese, that's silly."
I mean it never ends! Can someone just point out to people that nitpicking over things that you will forget in 5 seconds is exhausting? \
ClassicIsBetter said:Thank you! I've had many a debate with my roommate, how we both agree that the cause of many grammar-challenged people today are that way because of lack of reading. Even the reading programs in high school today are essentially meant for brain-dead individuals. I'm sorry, Harry Potter doesn't consitute as educational reading. Whatever happened to the 18th century literature I had to read? The Go-Between? Charles Dickens? Attention Deficit Disorder if a FICTIONAL DISEASE. It didn't exist until recently, it's nothing more than easing the worry of parents who have children who are behind for their age. No doctor or parent can convince me otherwise (not to pull a Tom Cruise or anything). I've studied psychology and research enough to know the truth. Give a kid a book and no child will be left behind.
An 's' item that bothers me is the constant adding of one at the end of words needlessly, mainly for store names. "I'm going to the Wal-marts, I'm going to the Krogers, etc." 'The' seems to be a word that has to be added before the store name as well.Mr. Sable said:I know how to write and speak properly; English was always my best subject in school. 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 for a more Golden Age flavour.
It does drive me batty when people throw in an apostrophe at the end of every word ending in 's'. That's the one that bugs (bothers ) me most.
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.
Willi_Goat said:An 's' item that bothers me is the constant adding of one at the end of words needlessly,
RedShoesGirl said:biggest mistake that newscasters make "under $12 or under 500 people"
it is "less than"
under refers to a place — "under the bed".
Senator Jack said:'Whom' is pretty much dead, isn't it? And then when people do use it to sound erudite, they get it wrong anyway.
Ex. 'I'd like to talk to whomever is in charge.'
No, it's 'whoever' is in charge.