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Grammar slam











Lincoln Imp

Well-known member
Feb 2, 2009
5,964
Another one creeping in is the joining of two words to make one which doesn't really exist.

'A lot' seems to be morphing into 'alot', or worse 'allot'. The latter does exist, but not in the form to mean 'an unspecified amount'. I've no idea how or why that is happening.

I'm on your side here but we can agree that it probably happens because for centuries words have been spontaneously coming together. Altogether, albeit and a hundred more. Into was created a long time ago and now, in front of our very eyes, onto is joining it. All right is still all right but some people are jumping the gun with alright. It's quite exciting really.

(My pet dislike is the incorrect positioning of the word 'only'. When people say "I only drink beer on Sundays" they probably don't mean that drinking beer is the only thing they do on the Sabbath. They mean that they drink beer only on Sundays. I wish they would say so.)
 


Brightonfan1983

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
4,863
UK
(My pet dislike is the incorrect positioning of the word 'only'. When people say "I only drink beer on Sundays" they probably don't mean that drinking beer is the only thing they do on the Sabbath. They mean that they drink beer only on Sundays. I wish they would say so.)

I like those little differences that make a big difference. imgres.jpeg
 




Buzzer

Languidly Clinical
Oct 1, 2006
26,121
Mispronunciation of harass and when people use hung instead of hanged. I had a very pedantic English teacher (Mrs Maddock, Durrington High) who almost beat those two into us.
 




KingKev

Well-known member
Jun 16, 2011
867
Hove (actually)
Hate the "could of" thing. My other particular pieces of pedantry include:-

Use of the plural form of verbs with singular nouns - "Brighton are...." "My team were".

Decline of the subjunctive...Use it or lose it, people.
 




Another one creeping in is the joining of two words to make one which doesn't really exist.

'A lot' seems to be morphing into 'alot', or worse 'allot'. The latter does exist, but not in the form to mean 'an unspecified amount'. I've no idea how or why that is happening.
It started with "onto". It was drummed into me at school that there is no such word. It now seems that there is.
 


And don't get me started on the expression "seven times less" (often about some new wonderful green advancement for instance this car produces seven times less carbon dioxide than its equivalent model). How can some thing be a magnitude less? Do they mean one seventh (which they should state) or do they mean that it actively consumes six times the amount of carbon dioxide that the equivalent model produces?
I once heard a radio announcer give out a weather forecast with the promise that "tomorrow's temperature will rise to 10 degrees celsius, twice as hot as today's 5 degrees".
 










Brovion

In my defence, I was left unsupervised.
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,870
Hate the "could of" thing. My other particular pieces of pedantry include:-

Use of the plural form of verbs with singular nouns - "Brighton are...." "My team were".

Decline of the subjunctive...Use it or lose it, people.
But in British/English when applied to a football team 'Brighton' IS a collective noun. For example we say "Brighton have the ball on the edge of their own penalty area", not "Brighton has the ball on the edge of its own penalty area" (which is the American way).

It is singular though when applied to the place: "Brighton is a seaside resort"

Totally agree with your other points though!
 




GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,186
Gloucester
For example we say "Brighton have the ball on the edge of their own penalty area".
Should this not be, "Brighton lose the ball on the edge of their own penalty area"? Your version does seem to be more commonly used now, and maybe it'll eventually become accepted, but historically 'lose' has been the correct form.
 


Lincoln Imp

Well-known member
Feb 2, 2009
5,964
It started with "onto". It was drummed into me at school that there is no such word. It now seems that there is.

As I implied, 'onto' is now accepted by most media. To us of a certain age, it looks ugly but the trend is probably irreversible and not, in the grand scheme of things, harmful - the merging of words has been going on for yonks.
 


I saw this in Sainsbury's a few weeks ago. Annoyed me so much that I took a photo and twittered at them. Their reply? "What seems to be the problem?" :facepalm:

View attachment 45588
Imagine if all possessives were indicated by 's and 'whose' hadn't evolved. Then somebody put whose on an internet forum. Wouldn't that then annoy you just as much? Probably, it would annoy you even more as it would be much less logical.
 


Brovion

In my defence, I was left unsupervised.
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,870
Should this not be, "Brighton lose the ball on the edge of their own penalty area"? Your version does seem to be more commonly used now, and maybe it'll eventually become accepted, but historically 'lose' has been the correct form.

Er, yes. I'm not quite with quite with you, that's exactly what I was saying. As 'Brighton' is a collective noun it conjugates as 'They lose'. If we go down King Kev's American route of it being a singular noun it would be 'It loses', so it would be 'Brighton loses the ball on the edge of its own penalty area'
 






Shropshire Seagull

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2004
8,790
Telford
lovin' this thread.

Brighton used above in the commentary context is a single entity [club / team] - the same as the town. If you're referring to the players, it would be plural.

The use of the apostrophe was made simple to me at school, use it when ever you remove letter(s) from a word. They are [they're], we were [we're], fish and chips [fish 'n' chips] etc.

One last one for you A* grammar peeps - how would you address a memo to two people of the same name, eg. John
Dear Johns
Dear John's
Dear Johns'
Dear John(s)
Dear John & John
or some way else?
 


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