Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if it's incorrect or not, but it sure grates on my nerves when people say "get a coffee" or "grab a coffee." It should be "get a cup of coffee" or "grab a cup of coffee."
Ok, that's overly pedantic imo. And I'm plenty pedantic as a rule!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who use "and I" incorrectly and it should be "and me" but they're being pretentious
And they don't realize that they are making themselves sound like idiots. It's like people are afraid of using the word me.
Funny but because of a former supervisor who was a grammar nazi, I am afraid of using the word "that." She felt like the word was overused, hated it, and would mark up files for corrections if we used it too much. Now, I am hyper aware to not use it more than once in a sentence.
It's funny that that would cause problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Verbal in place of oral. Verbal means in words. Written instructions are verbal.
Any modifier used with the word unique. Unique is binary, it means one of a kind. Something can't be very unique, somewhat unique or a little unique.
Assassination used to describe run of the mill murder.
It does not grate on me as a pet peeve because it is so rarely used and known, but I really appreciate when I see datum used in non technical writing.
Oral instructions are verbal. They consist of words.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who use "and I" incorrectly and it should be "and me" but they're being pretentious
And they don't realize that they are making themselves sound like idiots. It's like people are afraid of using the word me.
Funny but because of a former supervisor who was a grammar nazi, I am afraid of using the word "that." She felt like the word was overused, hated it, and would mark up files for corrections if we used it too much. Now, I am hyper aware to not use it more than once in a sentence.
Anonymous wrote:Verbal in place of oral. Verbal means in words. Written instructions are verbal.
Any modifier used with the word unique. Unique is binary, it means one of a kind. Something can't be very unique, somewhat unique or a little unique.
Assassination used to describe run of the mill murder.
It does not grate on me as a pet peeve because it is so rarely used and known, but I really appreciate when I see datum used in non technical writing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The towels "need washed" or the baby's diaper "needs changed." I understand this is a regionalism but it sounds so uneducated.
Where do you hear this? Trying to remember if it's a baltimore thing
Anonymous wrote:Seen instead of saw. "I seen him at the grocery store." I'm about as anti grammar grump as possible but it just sounds so silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Putting apostrophes where they are not necessary, especially in "its" (possessive). "It's" means "it is." I see this every day.
This. It is ubiquitous.
Anonymous wrote:less and fewer
And not putting punctuation inside quotation marks such as:
He called this flower a "buttercup." <--- correct
He called this flower a buttercup". <----- inccorrect *unless you're from England.
Anonymous wrote:I know it’s common now, but I hate when people say “myself” when they mean “me.”
“Please come talk to Sarah or myself. Thank you!”