To /Too
Could of
Should of
Your you're yaw
To /Too
Could of
Should of
Presumption, especially by radio presenters, that the whole country only works Monday to Friday 9-5. Driving to work on a Friday afternoon hearing them go "only a couple more hours at work to go, hope you all have a great weekend break".
People getting stroppy when you say you can't go to their bbq/birthday party/xmas dinner as you're working
People saying Xmas rather than Christmas
Grammatically, they are both correct apparently.I hate it when people are speaking on TV and they say '' an hotel '' instead of '' a hotel '' - I am not sure which one is grammatically correct but pronunciation wise, the latter sounds better
Radio travel experts talking about traffic delays due to an "earlier accident", no suit Sherlock, it's not because of an accident that hasn't happened yet, is it?
People in Britain calling Father Christmas, Santa Claus.
Other drivers who don't acknowledge you when you let them pass.
Grammatically, they are both correct apparently.
http://www.supaproofread.com/an-hotel-or-a-hotel.htmlI was always under the impression that A was used if the following word begins with a consonant and An was used if a Vowel.
So today I have learnt something, thank you.
Walk-in showers. How else do you enter a shower? By parachute?
Pan-fried whatever. How else do you fry food?
Oven-baked whatever. Where else would you bake food?
Traditional English pubs that translate their menus into French and then double the prices.
Drivers who treat zebra-crossings as mere decorations in the road.
I am/was stood/sat, instead of the correct standing/sitting.
Tattoos.
Jargon.
People who wear flip-flops in the streets on a sunny (but chilly) day in early-March.
People putting their feet on seats on buses and trains.
People talking loudly on their mobiles on public transport.
Mosquitoes.
Lists.
Walk-in showers. How else do you enter a shower? By parachute?
Pan-fried whatever. How else do you fry food?
Traditional English pubs that translate their menus into French and then double the prices.
People that put your change in the counter instead of in your hand.