Ah, my favorite kind of threadOne that I hear a lot of lately is "on accident" as in, "I did it on accident" instead of by accident. Where did that come from? I even caught my boss saying it the other day - on purpose!!
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Ah, my favorite kind of threadOne that I hear a lot of lately is "on accident" as in, "I did it on accident" instead of by accident. Where did that come from? I even caught my boss saying it the other day - on purpose!!
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Is it; waiting "on" line or......waiting "in" line?
All of "a" sudden or.....all of "the" sudden?
Somebody mentioned supposeBly as opposed to supposeDly.That one kills me, among others
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I've been Boo'd...
Thanks Barry!
This thread reminds me somehow of the Robert Burns quote:
In more modern English, it says "Oh, would some Power the gift give usO wad some power the giftie gie us
To see oursel's as ithers see us!
It wad frae monie a blunder free us.
And foolish notion;
What airs in dress and gait wad lea'e us,
And ev'n devotion!
to see ourselves as others see us!" and I'm sure you can all suss out the meaning of the rest.
I learned by first grade that one would not make friends by correcting one's classmates' grammar - but I did so anyway when it really bugged me, especially my neighbor who pronounced spaghetti as "puzgeddy" ...
My pet peeve are misplaced apostrophes, and when I see them used incorrectly on signage or in an advertisement, I will tell the store employees, especially on handwritten - and therefore easily corrected - signs.
Here's one that bugs me. There, their and they're. They're different words and aren't interchangeble!
Also its and it's. I have to think twice before I type that one.
And, since we're all sharing our pet peeves, here's some that I'm terribly guilty of...(yes, I just ended my sentence with a preposition.)
Affect and effect. What is the proper way to use this? "How will this affect me?"
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"Ladies, we need to stop comparing men to dogs. Dogs are loyal!" Wanda Sykes
The one that makes me want to tear out my hair is when people say "woof" instead of "wolf".
Thank you Wolf_Q!
From http://www.askoxford.comOriginally Posted by Lobodeb
To affect something is to change or influence it, To effect something is a rather formal way of saying `to make it happen'. Confusingly, either may produce an 'effect' or result. ('An affect' is a technical term in psychology.)
Correct usage:
The stability of the wall was affected by passing lorries.
The demolition of the wall was effected by the detonation of a charge of dynamite.
The dynamite did not just 'affect' (influence) the demolition of the wall: it caused it.
On the its and it's thing, we actually bought a box of Christmas cards the year before last that were beautiful on the outside, and the sentiment inside was good, but it said something along the lines of "...the star of Christmas shines it's light..." We took them back to the store for a refund and purchased different cards. Now, I read the inside very carefully before purchasing any card.Originally Posted by Lobodeb
As for affect and effect, the easiest way for me to remember is that "affect" is an "action." They both start with the letter a, so "affect" is a verb. "Effect," then is a noun.
Ok, so "the special effects of the movie affected me in a way I didn't expect."Originally Posted by prechrswife
Is that wright? hehehehe, just kidding.
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"Ladies, we need to stop comparing men to dogs. Dogs are loyal!" Wanda Sykes
I've always pronounced it "Kit-en" and it would drive my ex-coworker crazy, she insisted it was "Kit- ten".
That's one I can't get right. My husband has tried to help me with it many times, but I just can't get it right. I really try to avoid using those words.
- Kari
skin kids- Nathan, Topher, & Lilla
"Your" (means you own it) and "You're" (you are).
If there is an apostrophe in a word, chances are there's a letter missing - it's a contraction. Apostrophes are a hint...
I remember my grandmother saying "warsh" for "wash" all her life. She was born in Washington State and lived there til she was a teen. I have some friends born and raised there that say the same thing. Dialect, I guess.
"Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda
I remember my grandmother saying "warsh" for "wash" all her life. She was born in Washington State and lived there til she was a teen. I have some friends born and raised there that say the same thing. Dialect, I guess.
I think you can say warsh is a country term used in rural areas all over the US
and Canada. I hear it used here in rural Alabama, however, being raised in the
Birmingham Burbs, I never heard it used. We are talking about going just
30 miles to hear a major change in accent and word usage.
"wierd" is wrong; it's "weird". I know it sounds like the EE sound that the i makes should come first...but English is a crazy language with many parents. One can't assume anything about it!
My mom and sister, who were very intelligent - Darcia skipped grades in school, my mom had two undergraduate degrees and a Master's...spelled it "wierd" for years. It was quite a good feeling to point this anomaly out to them...![]()
"Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda
Karen I wish I could do that. I work with a girl who misuses Moot and Mute. She always says that something is a Mute Point. I have to bit my tongue because I want to refer her to the remote control on her TV.Originally Posted by Karen
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Moot - 1. open to discussion or debate; debatable; doubtful: a moot point.
2. of little or no practical value or meaning; purely academic.
Mute -1. silent; refraining from speech or utterance.
2. not emitting or having sound of any kind.
Another word that really bothers me is nuclear. So many people (our president is included in this) say nucular.That just makes me crazy!
I really only find what people type to be annoying. Sure, some things cause me to cringe when I hear it being said, but I realize that I make some of the same mistakes.
Some of my words are "blended" together, and therefore I appear uneducated about language. But, sit me in front of a computer and I can type it correctly for you, along with a definition and it being used correctly in a sentence. I type with good grammar because it's needed for college papers and such, but I say stuff as if I'm living on a farm. Some letters are said longer and not always in the correct way (ice sounds like a form of a donkey...).
I understand how it can be pet peeves to say stuff incorrectly, but we all make the same mistakes. Most of it is a regional difference - we were brought up realizing we could talk like that and still communicate just fine.
~Sara, Daisy, Jessie, Jake, & Jackson
<3 Gone but never forgotten <3
{Benjamin, Russell, Chester, Dexter, George Harrison, & Leeroy} {O.D.} {Trey} {John-Paul & Earl}
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