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."
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: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!”
Anonymous wrote:1. So many people seem to have forgotten how to conjugate short i verbs like sink and sing correctly. The past tense of sink is not sunk.
2. Disinterested and uninterested do not mean the same thing.
3. Fewer is a perfectly good word. I wish more people used it.
Anonymous wrote:People who use "and I" incorrectly and it should be "and me" but they're being pretentious
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Irregardless
This is now correct. Language evolves; you should evolve with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in an industry that involves writing about businesses and I hate when someone uses the pronoun "they" instead of "it."
I also hate when people put the periods and commas outside the quotation marks instead of inside. In the sentence above, more than half of the people with whom I work would have incorrectly ended the sentence with "it".
These are small things; I have no idea why they bug me. Even so, I would never correct someone unless it is an important because I also hate when people spend their time correcting other people's perfectly understandable grammar in casual contexts.
Not an excuse but, as both of those usages concern a split between British English and American English, are your coworkers from the Commonwealth?
Anonymous wrote:I work in an industry that involves writing about businesses and I hate when someone uses the pronoun "they" instead of "it."
I also hate when people put the periods and commas outside the quotation marks instead of inside. In the sentence above, more than half of the people with whom I work would have incorrectly ended the sentence with "it".
These are small things; I have no idea why they bug me. Even so, I would never correct someone unless it is an important because I also hate when people spend their time correcting other people's perfectly understandable grammar in casual contexts.