Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He made an A in History.
I hate that. He got an A in History.
we say he "got" an A in history. I don't think I ever heard he "made" an A in history. that's weird.
Anonymous wrote:Why do some people say "food shopping" instead of just grocery shopping? It sounds so simple-minded, like something a child would say. Major pet peeve. Any others?
Anonymous wrote:He made an A in History.
I hate that. He got an A in History.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say "The car needs washed." Which I know should have a verb somewhere in there, but yes, that's still the phrase that comes naturally to me. DH uses "up" instead of "away" in reference to cleaning. As in, "Larla, put up your toys when you are done playing." It's away. Larla, put your toys away.
All the others to me seem like regional dialect differences, and I'm sure this one probably is, too, but leaving out the "to be" before washed is like fingernails on a blackboard (chalkboard?) to me. How about trying "the car needs washing?"
The up versus away is still grammatically correct. The washed thing is not.
It is entirely correct regional speech.
http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=3422
You'll hear it in the North Midland region, but it is nonstandard usage. So, no, not grammatically correct.
http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/needs-washed
"Standard usage" and "grammatically correct" are not synonyms, and "nonstandard usage" and "grammatically correct" are not antonyms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say "The car needs washed." Which I know should have a verb somewhere in there, but yes, that's still the phrase that comes naturally to me. DH uses "up" instead of "away" in reference to cleaning. As in, "Larla, put up your toys when you are done playing." It's away. Larla, put your toys away.
All the others to me seem like regional dialect differences, and I'm sure this one probably is, too, but leaving out the "to be" before washed is like fingernails on a blackboard (chalkboard?) to me. How about trying "the car needs washing?"
The up versus away is still grammatically correct. The washed thing is not.
It is entirely correct regional speech.
http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=3422
You'll hear it in the North Midland region, but it is nonstandard usage. So, no, not grammatically correct.
http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/needs-washed
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say "The car needs washed." Which I know should have a verb somewhere in there, but yes, that's still the phrase that comes naturally to me. DH uses "up" instead of "away" in reference to cleaning. As in, "Larla, put up your toys when you are done playing." It's away. Larla, put your toys away.
All the others to me seem like regional dialect differences, and I'm sure this one probably is, too, but leaving out the "to be" before washed is like fingernails on a blackboard (chalkboard?) to me. How about trying "the car needs washing?"
The up versus away is still grammatically correct. The washed thing is not.
It is entirely correct regional speech.
http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=3422
Anonymous wrote:He was just loving on her.
Ohkaaay . .. .
Anonymous wrote:You know what sounds childish and uneducated to me?
People who get annoyed by regional differences in dialect.
Anonymous wrote:This one bugs me: "on your period" instead of having your period. How can you be on it?
Anonymous wrote:The bad one for me is when someone has a lot of leftovers from a meal and they say:
"Well, I am going to be eating "on" this all week long".
Shouldn't it be "from"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do some people say "food shopping" instead of just grocery shopping? It sounds so simple-minded, like something a child would say. Major pet peeve. Any others?
They are from New England. They probably have supper and use bubblers too.
I am from New England...what do you mean by bubbler? I think what I call a bubbler is probably not what you're talking about.
A water fountain. A bubblah! (MA born and raised). How do you not know what a bubbler is if you're from New England?
We call it a drinking fountain or a water fountain (ME born and raised, lived in MA 5 years, never heard it called a bubblah).