Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I said that on accident.
Can't stand that one. Also, "ignorant" as a synonym for "rude." That is ignorant.
Anonymous wrote:I said that on accident.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it's regional, but I hate "standing on line" instead of "in line"
Me too!
I also can't stand when people say they are doing "the splits" rather than saying they are doing "a split".
+1
In gymnastics (or cheerleading) you do a split. It might be a regular split or a russian split, but you just do one. One split. A split.
Thank you, PP. Thank you. Drives me crazy. How many legs do people have that do "the splits"?!
Well, there's a right split, a left split, and a middle split: the splits.
Middle split? You clearly know nothing about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. I'll add "to prom" instead "to the prom." Another regional variation.
This one bothers me, too. My kids all say this, so I guess it's regional here, but not where I grew up. It just doesn't make sense to me.
Me, too! I still remember from "Pretty in Pink" when Molly Ringwald yells "What about PROM?" at Andrew McCarthy.
I didn't have much in common with Molly Ringwald but we all said "going to Prom". New Englander.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. I'll add "to prom" instead "to the prom." Another regional variation.
This one bothers me, too. My kids all say this, so I guess it's regional here, but not where I grew up. It just doesn't make sense to me.
Me, too! I still remember from "Pretty in Pink" when Molly Ringwald yells "What about PROM?" at Andrew McCarthy.
I didn't have much in common with Molly Ringwald but we all said "going to Prom". New Englander.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. I'll add "to prom" instead "to the prom." Another regional variation.
This one bothers me, too. My kids all say this, so I guess it's regional here, but not where I grew up. It just doesn't make sense to me.
Me, too! I still remember from "Pretty in Pink" when Molly Ringwald yells "What about PROM?" at Andrew McCarthy.
I didn't have much in common with Molly Ringwald but we all said "going to Prom". New Englander.
Anonymous wrote:+1. I'll add "to prom" instead "to the prom." Another regional variation.
This one bothers me, too. My kids all say this, so I guess it's regional here, but not where I grew up. It just doesn't make sense to me.
Me, too! I still remember from "Pretty in Pink" when Molly Ringwald yells "What about PROM?" at Andrew McCarthy.
+1. I'll add "to prom" instead "to the prom." Another regional variation.
This one bothers me, too. My kids all say this, so I guess it's regional here, but not where I grew up. It just doesn't make sense to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know what sounds childish and uneducated to me?
People who get annoyed by regional differences in dialect.
Most of those people are small minded people who travel. Anyone who is bothered by accents or dialects probably never leaves there little corner of the worlds, which is ok too.
Anonymous wrote:You know what sounds childish and uneducated to me?
People who get annoyed by regional differences in dialect.