Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Peeve: "I could care less."
That is INCORRECT! If you COULD care less, then why don't you?
The correct phrase is: "I COULDN'T care less!" (i.e. you care so little about something that it is impossible to care even less than you do).
Idiomatic usage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Axe. It's ASK. And yes there are white people who say this. Scary that my kid's teacher is one.
Christ, I’ve never heard that. Will look out for it. Carrying an axe.
Anonymous wrote:Lie and lay. No one lies down anymore, they lay down.
Anonymous wrote:Peeve: "I could care less."
That is INCORRECT! If you COULD care less, then why don't you?
The correct phrase is: "I COULDN'T care less!" (i.e. you care so little about something that it is impossible to care even less than you do).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who do not use "I" and "me" properly.
Susie and I went to the store. (CORRECT)
Tom went to the store with Susie and I. (INCORRECT).
Tom went to the store with Susie and me. (CORRECT).
I was taught that, when using a first person singular pronoun, the pronoun goes nearest to the verb such that your last example should end ". . . with me and Susie."
Anonymous wrote:Axe. It's ASK. And yes there are white people who say this. Scary that my kid's teacher is one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
They only use a single, double quote in England? Who knew?
Funny. I'm old and grew up in the south and was taught the incorrect version. We also were taught gray was grey and color was spelled colour.
Np, I have a habit of spelling words using British grammar, too (colour, cancelled, aesthetic, flavour, etc.), and I don't know where it stems from. I chalked it up as possibly being British in a past life.
I chalk it up to you being pretentious.
In certain parts of this country back in the day, they taught us English grammar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Data is a plural word!
Data are a plural word.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Data is a plural word!
Data are a plural word.
Anonymous wrote:People who do not use "I" and "me" properly.
Susie and I went to the store. (CORRECT)
Tom went to the store with Susie and I. (INCORRECT).
Tom went to the store with Susie and me. (CORRECT).
Anonymous wrote:Data is a plural word!