More Awesome Than You!

TS3/TSM: The Pudding => The World Of Pudding => Topic started by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 03:54:34



Title: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 03:54:34
Since the tidal wave of sheep shows no sign of letting up, and the most important task is sorting the occasional nugget of wheat from the chaff, Pescado has strongly suggested that grammatical errors and other behaviour demanding the sharp spork be handled by a barrage of PMs, rather than excessive poking in the thread. You may also like to take your guffaws to any relevant thread in RL, such as Miss Sheeple 2009.

I will be taking notice of the naughty and the nice with regard to respecting this decree, for Grammar Day Awards purposes. If warranted, someone can make a thread in RL to post the butthurt responses to the PM barrage.

Thank you for co-operation.

OH, and if you are a SHEEP reading this, then FUCKING LEARN TO SPELL, ASSHOLE.

Moderator edit: And read the FAQ (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php/topic,7437.0.html)!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Insanity Prelude on 2009 May 29, 04:01:31
* InsanityPrelude salutes

Can do.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 04:23:03
I'm guessing, this is somewhat pointed at me? :)
EDIT: Duly noted. Just like Santa, I'll be checking my posts twice, three, four or more times.
I'll also ask my mom to read over it too. Hehe.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: coltraz on 2009 May 29, 04:27:13
I'm guessing, this is somewhat pointed at me? :)
Dearly noted. Just like Santa, I'll be checking my posts twice, three, four or more times.
I'll also ask my mom to read over it too. Hehe.

I think you mean duly noted.  ::)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 04:35:36
I think you mean duly noted.  ::)
Lulz. Now I've put my foot in it. But, It's something I have learned for today. I think that's the first time I have had to write it. I don't use the "Old Vocabulary", nor the New one I guess. Hehe.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 May 29, 04:42:55
(http://cats.moreawesomethanyou.com/edumaction.jpg)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 04:50:59
Every day is a learning curve! W00t!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 05:02:00
Yo, JonaBullshit, I have a newsflash for you:  NOT EVERYTHING IS ABOUT YOU. But thanks for adding another piece of evidence to my growing pile. I am utterly backing you for Miss Sheeple.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 05:21:46
Yo, JonaBullshit, I have a newsflash for you:  NOT EVERYTHING IS ABOUT YOU. But thanks for adding another piece of evidence to my growing pile. I am utterly backing you for Miss Sheeple.
Lulz, I love the name calling, so mature. Add it to your pile, good for you.
I know that MATY has its grammar and spelling rules, and that people have been slipping up (ME included).
I was simply making a comment at this being directed at me based off the posts in one of the other threads and not taking it to heart keeping a smile on my face. Gees!
Smile.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 05:31:11
Dude. This is MATY. We are ad hominem central. Also, you might want to check my post count, my custom title and the list of my duties around here.

Oh, but you wouldn't do that because you are an arrogant little shit with no actual substance to any of your comments. Who else but a grade 1 snowflake comes to a site and makes grandiose statements about how long it is willing to wait for its haxxors, while both claiming they are indispensable and at the same time being unable to remember what they are called.

Think it's just me? Look at the crowds of people rushing to second my nomination of you as stand-out tard of the season.

You know what would make your claims about taking it with a smile credible? If you learned to use the English language, and managed even one post that didn't have an egregious error in it.

Want to know what happens to people who take me on? Search is your friend. I have bested better tards than you, little snowflake.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 05:43:20
...Also, you might want to check my post count...
...
Who else but a grade 1 snowflake comes to a site and makes grandiose statements about how long it is willing to wait for its haxxors, while both claiming they are indispensable and at the same time being unable to remember what they are called.
"Also, you might want to check my post count," Some one has to start somewhere, correct?
"grandiose statements about how long it is willing to wait for its haxxors" Where are these "statements"?
"being unable to remember what they are called." Unable to remember what, what is called? :s


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 06:09:37
As I have mentioned, I highlighted these gems from you in your nomination for Miss Sheeple. If you could be bothered to look, you would see.

I know, you are imagining you are pwning me with your poorly phrased questions. You are wrong.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 29, 06:13:20
Gees!
Smile.

Are you driving a team of horses as you post, or were you just dropped on your head repeatedly?

Thanks this is gr8.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 06:14:07
And... Meh. Good day, Donk.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: NakedNickJonas on 2009 May 29, 06:43:42
I think as long as a post is readable that's all that matters, this isn't an examination it's a forum.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 06:47:52
I think as long as a post is readable that's all that matters, this isn't an examination it's a forum.
Mmm, that was my understand too. I've I mentioned that I'm a shit speller and all that seems to have happened is I've been laughed at. The kind of pointing and laughing you tell your children off for doing when their see a retarded person down the street. Pathetic I think.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 May 29, 06:57:07
I think as long as a post is readable, that's all that matters. This isn't an examination; it's a forum.

This particular forum will probably make you nostalgic for examinations (see FAQ).  It's not a good idea to come into a forum where you are new and dictate the mode of discourse.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Kyna on 2009 May 29, 06:57:43
I think as long as a post is readable that's all that matters, this isn't an examination it's a forum.
Mmm, that was my understand too. I've I mentioned that I'm a shit speller and all that seems to have happened is I've been laughed at. The kind of pointing and laughing you tell your children off for doing when their see a retarded person down the street. Pathetic I think.

This is MATY, pointing & laughing at the less awesome is what we do here.

Newsflash for the idiotically slow:  MATY is NOT real life.  In real life that "retarded person down the street" doesn't have a choice in the matter - they were born that way, and personally I would find it offensive to refer to them in the manner you just chose to.  However, here at MATY if anyone chooses to post in a retarded manner then they do so by their own choice, so pointing & laughing at people who post in a retarded manner here is entirely appropriate.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: NakedNickJonas on 2009 May 29, 07:05:42
I find that offensive. Are people with dyslexia or other learning abilities not allowed to post here?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 07:09:06
Did JonaFootBullet make a sock just so someone would agree with it? That is fantastic.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Kyna on 2009 May 29, 07:12:42
I find that offensive. Are people with dyslexia or other learning abilities not allowed to post here?

Use a browser with a decent spell-check.

I've known many dyslexic people at many different forums.  The smart ones use a spell-checker before posting, and nobody would have known that these posters were dyslexic if they hadn't mentioned it themselves at some stage.

Stop trying to be a smart-ass who is trying to trip us up with stupid questions like that one, NakedNick.  We've heard it all before (many times before!) from countless morons who have dropped by and tried to change us.

WYSIWYG.  If you don't like it, then fuck off and go someplace else.  We're not going to change just to suit you.  You're not that fucking special.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 07:21:26
I find that offensive. Are people with dyslexia or other learning abilities not allowed to post here?
Cheers Nick. But I wouldn't bother wasting your breath with these insensitive/immature pricks. This is all so pretty pathetic. they started this war with me. I'm happy to have the bullets (pun) fired at me. Call me what ever names you like, and abuse me all you like. In the end... Meh. I've stated my case, and my ability to not spell that well. If by picking the shit of it me and others makes you feel better or more "awesome" than the rest of us good for you. I'm not going to lose any sleep over you jerks. :)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: witch on 2009 May 29, 07:38:05
Yeehaar! JonaPullsit  whatever happened to the good intentions in your apology-caek PMs to me? Have you forgotten your 'good internet friend' already?

You're cruisin' for a bruisin' kiddo.

This is our place, our rules, if you don't like them you really don't have to stay here. Rly!

Yesterday you were complaining that I'd spoiled your mood for the day; keep on like this and you're likely to have a pretty sad weekend - although perhaps you don't spend your time on forums when you are not at work. You do know IBM is laying people off all over the world, don't you? You must also know that large computer companies are very likely to be tracking internet usage at work? I think you're in for some tough life lessons over the next couple of years.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 07:49:53
Yeehaar! JonaPullsit  whatever happened to the good intentions in your apology-caek PMs to me? Have you forgotten your 'good internet friend' already?

You're cruisin' for a bruisin' kiddo.

This is our place, our rules, if you don't like them you really don't have to stay here. Rly!

Yesterday you were complaining that I'd spoiled your mood for the day; keep on like this and you're likely to have a pretty sad weekend - although perhaps you don't spend your time on forums when you are not at work. You do know IBM is laying people off all over the world, don't you? You must also know that large computer companies are very likely to be tracking internet usage at work? I think you're in for some tough life lessons over the next couple of years.

Not to mention, S-M-R-T people that work for big multi-nationals (such as myself) aren't stupid enough to post which multi-national they work for when they do manage to slack off on MATY from work...because it's like a red rag to a bull for the filter bots and then you're basically posting public evidence of being a slack-ass on the company dime.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: JonaBullets on 2009 May 29, 08:04:28
Yeehaar! JonaPullsit  whatever happened to the good intentions in your apology-caek PMs to me? Have you forgotten your 'good internet friend' already?

You're cruisin' for a bruisin' kiddo.

This is our place, our rules, if you don't like them you really don't have to stay here. Rly!

Yesterday you were complaining that I'd spoiled your mood for the day; keep on like this and you're likely to have a pretty sad weekend - although perhaps you don't spend your time on forums when you are not at work. You do know IBM is laying people off all over the world, don't you? You must also know that large computer companies are very likely to be tracking internet usage at work? I think you're in for some tough life lessons over the next couple of years.
Hehe, yes I was aware of IBM laying people off, not me though, for now. :P Anyways, I did apologize for my crappy spelling and grammar, but it just continued on and on, and look at it now. Yeah I cant spell. Yeah I'm shit. Yeah I'm not awesome, but come on, enough is enough. This is just going on and on. I'm over it, I'm sure every one else is. *Sings: Why can't we be friends, why can't we be friends* :)
I'm doing my hardest to keep the Grammar Nazi's out there happy, but now it's just blown way out of the water. I've said I'll try. Shit, if that's not good enough what is 'Oh, Awesome Ones'? :P
Thank you witch for your kind reply, kindness goes along way, and is more noticed.

Not to mention, S-M-R-T people that work for big multi-nationals (such as myself) aren't stupid enough to post which multi-national they work for when they do manage to slack off on MATY from work...because it's like a red rag to a bull for the filter bots and then you're basically posting public evidence of being a slack-ass on the company dime.
As advised by my manager, he has no problems with us surfing the net, MSNing and what not, while at work/doing work. With what I do, sitting there doing sweet FA comes with the role. We have a lot of scripts and applications that do the work for us, so while waiting for those to do their job, we surf the net and go for breaks etc.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 29, 08:24:55
As has been stated before, this is MATY.  To elaborate, it's More Awesome Than You, a title which should tell you something about the kind of people who are most active here.  It's not a standard buddy-buddy forum.  You don't come here to be loved or fawned upon or greeted with open arms, you come here for information and downloads to make your game More Awesome.

So, if you don't want to be nominated for any Sheeple Awards, first off you should lurk a lot before asking stupid questions, see how those who have posted most handle things, look to see if your question has already been answered, use a spell-checker if you're shit at spelling, and then close your eyes and plunge into the water.  If you don't want chunks bitten off you, don't play with the tigers.

As for RL disabilities or difficulties, that's a whole different subject and not relevant to forum life.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 08:33:11

Not to mention, S-M-R-T people that work for big multi-nationals (such as myself) aren't stupid enough to post which multi-national they work for when they do manage to slack off on MATY from work...because it's like a red rag to a bull for the filter bots and then you're basically posting public evidence of being a slack-ass on the company dime.
As advised by my manager, he has no problems with us surfing the net, MSNing and what not, while at work/doing work. With what I do, sitting there doing sweet FA comes with the role. We have a lot of scripts and applications that do the work for us, so while waiting for those to do their job, we surf the net and go for breaks etc.

Given my company hasn't laid anyone off yet in any of the countries we operate in and yours has, I don't like the odds. Just because you *can* doesn't necessarily mean you *should*. After all, it's not your supervisor's job on the line if they begin to monitor what you're up to and the content of what you're actually discussing. As it stands, you're using corporate property to publicly discuss a pirated and thus illegal product. Under corporate laws, anything you do on a company-owned PC is "property" of the company, which means you've essentially bought IBM into your piracy discussions on the use of the product. Don't think it's possible to bite you in the ass? A friend of mine works for Telstra - she was fired because she was discussing on a forum the fact that she had downloaded the leaked X-Men Origins movie about a month or so ago and had it on her external HDD that was attached to her work PC.

BLS, nooblet. If you think your company would keep your job as opposed to cutting you loose to protect their bottom line, you're in for a shock in the real world. Hell, I'd expect that and the company I work for has stated publicly that we value our staff over our customers.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Dizzymental on 2009 May 29, 08:36:39
Man, this place just gets more surreal every time I come here. LMAO.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Frankenbeasley on 2009 May 29, 08:47:27
...plunge into the water.  If you don't want chunks bitten off you, don't play with the tigers.

For some reason your post made me think of this:

(http://i42.tinypic.com/91ghlw.jpg)

ETA: original source with choice of three pictures here: Tiger Meets Dolphin (http://www.boreme.com/boreme/funny-2009/tiger-meets-dolphin-p1.php)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 29, 08:54:40
Now that's what I call Awesome!  I'm going to have to have that as wallpaper.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 May 29, 09:28:48
Wow JonaBullshit you really are exceedingly speshul aren't you? This thread wasn't set up for you, but thanks for turning it into the 'zomg look at meeeee' show. Congrats.

As has already been pointed out, this is not your forum. If you don't like the rules here then you are under no obligation to stick around. In fact, I'd strongly advise you to get the fuck out. Stop acting like a wronged hero - in the grand scheme of things you're a mere speck in MATY's history. I doubt we'll even remember you in a month's time. Just do us all a favour and go back to the BBS, where you quite clearly belong.

Edited for spelling


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GloamingMerle on 2009 May 29, 10:02:47
u guys r totaly loosing site of the rael prob here. many of the ppl here are ESL or rly young or victums of US public educashun and dont deserv 2 b maed fun of!!!!!111 maty is suposed 2 b 4 talkin about sims and not 4 being big meanie fatheads! it is not about the qualty of there speling or grammer but the qualty of the concepts behind them! evrytime u call ppl names 4 typing wrong god kills a kiten and dedukts points from ur karma bank. so b nice ok?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Giggy on 2009 May 29, 10:07:04
u guys r totaly loosing site of the rael prob here. many of the ppl here are ESL or rly young or victums of US public educashun and dont deserv 2 b maed fun of!!!!!111 maty is suposed 2 b 4 talkin about sims and not 4 being big meanie fatheads! it is not about the qualty of there speling or grammer but the qualty of the concepts behind them! evrytime u call ppl names 4 typing wrong god kills a kiten and dedukts points from ur karma bank. so b nice ok?

Ah fuck up and die!

Edit:
!fail Giggy

Clearly, Giggy has failed us! YOU MUST NOT! Various people have FAILED 666 times.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: witch on 2009 May 29, 10:08:27
Ah fuck up and die!

Giggy, no. Gloaming Merle has been around a lot longer than you and is merely taking the piss.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 May 29, 10:53:06
Giggy, no. Gloaming Merle has been around a lot longer than you and is merely taking the piss.

LOL yeah, I know who he is :D (w00t you're famous!); I'm using his purple alien default replacement all the time.

BTW, I would add that ESLs are likely going to be MORE pissed by moronic errors: they make the reading way more hard to us. Next time I see a your in place of you're I'm going to blast the poster's head with dynamite.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: missaaliyah on 2009 May 29, 10:55:17
LOL that is too funny.  I will endeavor to make sure that I spell everything correctly and my grammer is correct.  BTW asshole is spelt arsehole.  Unless of course you are referring to them as being a donkey  ;)   :D


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 May 29, 11:09:14
Giggy, no. Gloaming Merle has been around a lot longer than you and is merely taking the piss.

LOL yeah, I know who he is :D (w00t you're famous!); I'm using his purple alien default replacement all the time.

BTW, I would add that ESLs are likely going to be MORE pissed by moronic errors: they make the reading way more hard to us. Next time I see a your in place of you're I'm going to blast the poster's head with dynamite.

Yes, and also, if we can manage to be coherent in a language that is not our first, those who grow up with it should be able to as well. Argh.

LOL that is too funny.  I will endeavor to make sure that I spell everything correctly and my grammer is correct.  BTW asshole is spelt arsehole.  Unless of course you are referring to them as being a donkey  ;)   :D

Grammar and spelled, moron.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: NakedNickJonas on 2009 May 29, 11:19:33
u guys r totaly loosing site of the rael prob here. many of the ppl here are ESL or rly young or victums of US public educashun and dont deserv 2 b maed fun of!!!!!111 maty is suposed 2 b 4 talkin about sims and not 4 being big meanie fatheads! it is not about the qualty of there speling or grammer but the qualty of the concepts behind them! evrytime u call ppl names 4 typing wrong god kills a kiten and dedukts points from ur karma bank. so b nice ok?

People don't have to have perfect spelling and grammar but that is just ridiculous!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GloamingMerle on 2009 May 29, 11:20:47
Quote
Ah fuck up and die!

LMFAO! I just knew someone would fail to sense my sarcasm, yet I'm amazed by it all the same. I thought it was pretty obvious.

Quote
BTW, I would add that ESLs are likely going to be MORE pissed by moronic errors: they make the reading way more hard to us.

Ah, that makes sense. It always ticks me off when someone treats ESL-folk like morons when they make a grammatical error. Actually, they tend to have a firmer grasp on spelling and grammar than many of my fellow U.S.ians, and even if they don't, I just want to say to the people giving them a hard time, "--and how many languages do YOU speak?"

Quote
LOL yeah, I know who he is Cheesy (w00t you're famous!); I'm using his purple alien default replacement all the time.

Moi? Famous? Aw, shucks... I haven't even made uploaded anything in ages. My interest in Sims 2 practically went down the toilet after Pests Pets. I never even got around to reducing my Laverwinkle skin file-size after learning how to years ago.  :-[


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Frankenbeasley on 2009 May 29, 11:30:10
Grammar and spelled, moron.

"Spelt" is a correct and common British form of the past, and past participle, of "Spell". Since the poster is fairly obviously (c.f. "arsehole") a Briton, or colonial offshoot, I feel we have to let them have this.

Moi? Famous? Aw, shucks... I haven't even made uploaded anything in ages. My interest in Sims 2 practically went down the toilet after Pests Pets. I never even got around to reducing my Laverwinkle skin file-size after learning how to years ago.  :-[

Not nearly as famous as you deserve. Your alien skins are one of only three pieces of cc I have ever been prepared to use.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 11:31:30
Its ironic that this site is so bothered about grammar, yet doesn't care in the slightest about common politeness to people you don't know.  You'd think priorities would be different.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GloamingMerle on 2009 May 29, 11:37:44
Moi? Famous? Aw, shucks... I haven't even made uploaded anything in ages. My interest in Sims 2 practically went down the toilet after Pests Pets. I never even got around to reducing my Laverwinkle skin file-size after learning how to years ago.  :-[

Not nearly as famous as you deserve. Your alien skins are one of only three pieces of cc I have ever been prepared to use.

This is likely due to the fact that I am an Epic Lurker, which is likely due to the fact that the last thing I really want is fame.

Its ironic that this site is so bothered about grammar, yet doesn't care in the slightest about common politeness to people you don't know.  You'd think priorities would be different.

Nothing is as you think it should be in Awesomeland.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 May 29, 11:40:59
Honestly, the sheer size of the tidal wave of illiteracy made my Grammar Cat circuits short out for a while, and I am more than happy to  hold my special Grammar Police Spork and Knife in reserve for now. I was dreading the long hours of constant resharpening ahead.

However, I will be Taking Notes. You illiterate, arrogant little pissants need to LEARN U A BOOK already.

This IS MATY University, a branch of the School of Hard Knocks, and you do not get extra credit for emoties, coloured text, or "creative" use of punctuation. We are not breathlessly awaiting your next pearl of wisdom, dear sheeply n00bs, and the more you fail not to fail, the more likely it is that you will Be Noticed and Smited.

Handy Tips:
* We don't CARE that you're new. We pretty much figured that out from your low post count, stupid blinky avatar, huge signature images, and failure to READ THE FAQ. Your FAIL also gave it away.
* We don't hand-hold and pass out lollies here to the inept. If you get a virus because you couldn't follow directions or ask for help via PM, too bad for you. If you can't find a torrent or hack or thread and it is OBVIOUS you didn't bother to search and just arrogantly assumed we are all sitting around with nothing better to do than provide you with a personalized roadmap or guide, or to repeat information readily available if you SEARCH, too bad for you.
* Your attempts to be a Speshul Snowflayke with your non-standard capitalization, use of coloured fonts / font sizes, weird txtspk spelling / teen slang and ability to throw whiny little tanties when you are not met with snuggles and pats on the head are guaranteed to make you unpopular here; again, too bad for you.

READ THE FAQ, USE SPELLCHECK, and stop the whole "the world revolves around ME and MY WANTS" attitude, and you'll do fine.

We're cranky here. Most of us have been online a LOOOOOOOOOOOONG time and are beyond tired of the typical Interweebz FAIL and shenanigans and laziness. If you're offended, you don't belong here. There will be other places where you can have a group sing-a-long of "Kumbaya" and pretend to care about each other's days, your Special Sisters, your "creative" abuse of the English language, your made-up attention-seeking disorders and diseases, and and your emotional ups and downs.

P.S. to Dylan: you can't help but be Awesome both by deed and by association. It is your cross to bear, I am afraid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Frankenbeasley on 2009 May 29, 11:47:57
Its ironic that this site is so bothered about grammar, yet doesn't care in the slightest about common politeness to people you don't know.  You'd think priorities would be different.

Since this a text-based environment, in which one's interactions, abilities, and associations occur solely in the written form, the use of correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation forms the basis of politeness, you fuckwit.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 11:54:50
Since the tidal wave of sheep shows no sign of letting up, and the most important task is sorting the occasional nugget of wheat from the chaff, Pescado has strongly suggested that grammatical errors and other behaviour demanding the sharp spork be handled by a barrage of PMs, rather than excessive poking in the thread.

This is too choice. Pescado himself has decreed that the information is more important than the grammar and spelling.  

I was wondering how long the threadshitting would go on.  Got the inappropriate trait much?

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 12:01:54
So i've been called a fuckwit because i showed a bit of empathy to either side? Wow, well thats polite for sure. I'd say not calling someone a name is more polite than if you spell the sentence wrong. That is all i was saying.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 12:04:56
Do you go into another person's home in meatspace as a guest and begin telling them how they need to arrange their furniture, how they need to raise their children and how they should behave in their own home? No? Then why the fuck would you do it here at MATY? It's the exact same thing. This is our home and the sheeple have waltzed in our front door and taken a giant deuce on the good rug during tea.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MaryH on 2009 May 29, 12:06:14
Quote
Its ironic that this site is so bothered about grammar, yet doesn't care in the slightest about common politeness to people you don't know.  You'd think priorities would be different.

We're not being paid to be polite. This is our hobby and this is where we hang out. Our priorities are far different from yours. Our standards of language, civility and conduct differ vastly from the BBS.
Obey the rules, and you won't get sporked. If you do break the rules, you'll do the penalty.

Or as I always ask of impolite and stupid people: "Do I know you? Should I care about what you think?"


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 12:07:55
But no ones doing that, or only a tiny few. It's like you've become so paranoid and obsessed that you are trying to be 'changed' that you've spun it all out of proportion. People make spelling mistakes, it's one of those little things but there is no need to bring up people on every single one!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 12:09:26
But no ones doing that, or only a tiny few. It's like you've become so paranoid and obsessed that you are trying to be 'changed' that you've spun it all out of proportion. People make spelling mistakes, it's one of those little things but there is no need to bring up people on every single one!

If you don't smack a pup with a rolled up paper, how will it learn not to go on your rug?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 12:14:05
Seeing as my career is animal care, if you like i could tell you the numerous humane ways of puppy training? Anyway, there is always a choice.. you use a 'rolled up paper' and do something that is uncalled for and meant to be bad, or you use some other way that won't offend and isn't intentionally rude. None of the people making spelling mistakes in this forum are intentionally trying to piss anyone off or be rude, but all the people who reply to these mistakes intentionally mean to be horrible and that is where the politeness is lost on those people.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 12:15:29
To borrow a quote from the beautiful Patrick Bateman, I fail to see how this is my problem.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 12:15:58
You make it your problem.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 May 29, 12:16:59
Grammar and spelled, moron.

"Spelt" is a correct and common British form of the past, and past participle, of "Spell". Since the poster is fairly obviously (c.f. "arsehole") a Briton, or colonial offshoot, I feel we have to let them have this.

ORLY? I even double checked to make sure I didn't embarrass myself, but it didn't help apparently. Thanks, that was graet. I do like to learn.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 12:18:40
You make it your problem.

I'm not the one that looks like Helen Keller has control of their keyboard; problem's not on my end.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 May 29, 12:22:44
But no ones doing that, or only a tiny few. It's like you've become so paranoid and obsessed that you are trying to be 'changed' that you've spun it all out of proportion. People make spelling mistakes, it's one of those little things but there is no need to bring up people on every single one!

Yes.  Yes there is a need.  This is how things ARE.  There is your definition of politeness, which is not currently in effect on MATY.  The norms of behaviour here dictate that we do not tolerate sheep, tardn00bs, and those who otherwise annoy us.  Poor spelling and grammar annoys us.  Actually, rather a lot of things, defined and undefined, annoy us.  This is the way we like it.  If one starts making exceptions for one or two n00bs (Oh, she's just new, young, stupid, whatever...) then we have started down the slippery slope into the mediocre world of happy happy forums, and that would be bad for MOAR FIGHT.  So, as you can see, it is very important to spork every instance whenever possible and lulzy.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 12:23:07
So what reaction would you give your child (if you have/had one), say a teenager who had accidently spelled something wrong. If you told them how to spell it properly you wouldn't use any of the language that people use in here. My only point is that on forums where you get people from everywhere, you are going to get mistakes, some people are just excited about getting a point across or something so rush the message. When you read over it, it really doesn't matter if 'their' or 'there' is round the wrong way. It's the content that should be important. But even if you can't help but get bothered by it, there's different ways of going about it. That's all


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 12:25:37
So what reaction would you give your child (if you have/had one), say a teenager who had accidently spelled something wrong. If you told them how to spell it properly you wouldn't use any of the language that people use in here. My only point is that on forums where you get people from everywhere, you are going to get mistakes, some people are just excited about getting a point across or something so rush the message. When you read over it, it really doesn't matter if 'their' or 'there' is round the wrong way. It's the content that should be important. But even if you can't help but get bothered by it, there's different ways of going about it. That's all

Hey fuck-knuckle - this is a board designed for 18s, not 12s. Fact of the matter is these tards are *NOT* our children; we don't *HAVE* to hold their hand and tell them they shouldn't lick windows and eat paste. We don't *HAVE* to be nice here. To go back to the analogy from earlier, this is our house and it's our rules - if we want to beat you like a red headed stepchild while you're under our roof, no one can stop us.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 12:30:30
Well you turned out to be a wondeful person didn't you. I just think all this is such a shame.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dorquemada on 2009 May 29, 12:35:37
SC, you obviously didn't bother to read much of this forum, did you? Else you'd know it doesn't do polite...if by 'polite' you mean "treacly false welcome topped with passive-aggressive requests and iced with fake smileys when what you really want is to kick those annoying buggers to hell". Your comparison is stupid, because one's own kid <>random annoying douche on the 'net. As for it "doesn't matter if 'their' or 'there'", well...it's good you're in animal edumacation, not people. Although I bet puppies trained by you pee everywhere and on everything, what with your attitude.

P.S.: Oh, I just now noticed your sig is bracketed with ~s. This makes anything you say null and void by default.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 12:36:00
Well you turned out to be a wondeful person didn't you. I just think all this is such a shame.

Oh sugartits, this is the internet. I don't have to be nice to you because I don't know you from Adam. You're not someone I have to see in meatspace on a daily basis, you have *zero* effect on anything that relates to having an effect on my life. Unlike some of the bleeding axe wounds around here ala Ellatrout, I don't equate people on the internet with meatspace. I'm a totally different person in meatspace because the social norms and contexts dictate that I have to be, because in meatspace I'm in someone else's house and am a guest (see how the analogy keeps working? Damn I'm good). Here it's my house and if I want my feet up on my coffee table I damn well will put them up so get back in the kitchen and bake me a pie or STFU.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MaryH on 2009 May 29, 12:37:05
Now you know where MATY gets its' reputation. We're the big bullies who insist on proper grammar, spelling and punctuation.

You might think it's a shame, but we certainly don't. Our house, our rules.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 May 29, 12:39:32
Now you know where MATY gets its' reputation. We're the big bullies who insist on proper grammar, spelling and punctuation.

You might think it's a shame, but we certainly don't. Our house, our rules.


There was a speck on your message, I cleaned it up for you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: caterpillar on 2009 May 29, 12:43:04
Well you turned out to be a wondeful person didn't you. I just think all this is such a shame.

If you don't like it here, go somewhere else. The majority of forums would actually agree with you about hand holding tards and would welcome you with smileys. You might have to wait a few more days to post about your illegally pirated Sims 3 games at those forums, but once it's been released I'm sure you and all the other n00btards will be much happier in that kind of atmosphere.
People who have been at MATY for a long time choose to stay here because we prefer to not be bothered with trying to decipher the poorly spelled and incomprehensible ramblings of people who can't be bothered to learn their language properly. We don't want to see MATY become like the BBS or all the other happy forums, and we don't appreciate you all streaming in here and demanding we treat you like they do at forums we don't like and don't want to be like.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 May 29, 12:43:12
Well you turned out to be a wondeful person didn't you. I just think all this is such a shame.

Yes, we did turn out to be 'wondeful' people ~Jenni~. Thanks for noticing. You may think this is such a shame, I happen to think it's hilarious.

Just because this is "the Internet" does not mean that you should stop using the rules of spelling and grammar. This is not a real time chat room, there are no penalties for taking the time to proofread. Yes, everyone makes mistakes, and around here everyone will jump on the bandwagon of pointing them out. Just acknowledge that you fucked up, correct your mistake, and move on. Butthurt just amuses us more.

Now ~Jenni~, do please carry on being illiterate and retarded. I am out of caffeine and could really use some more stupidity to wake me up.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 12:43:54
SimplyComplex, welcome to MATY.  That's the way things are here, and nothing you can do will change that.  Trust me on this one.  Many people have tried.  All have failed.  I gave up long ago.

There's only one person you have to please, and that's Pescado.  None of the others matter.  Pescado likes it when people fight.  Always keep that in mind.

Just don't do anything too stupid.  Grammar and spelling and punctuation mistakes are regarded as stupid.  Proofread before you hit the Post button.

And hang in there.  MATY will always have information you can't get anywhere else, so it's worth putting up with the crap.

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 12:44:20
'Lol..' seriously that's all i have to say to both your replies. You are so closed minded you can't see the grey inbetween. Well i tried to put another point across but you're not having any of it so i suppose it's just another shame. Oh gosh, i used wiggles to emphasize my name, that MUST mean i'm a pleb. And my attitude? It's a good one to have, i'm proud of it, i know i'm a fair person. Don't worry though you can have your little obsession back, i can see your never going to open your eyes. Would just be nice if you were nicer to people even when you want to get a grammar point across.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 12:45:53
Now that, was a polite reply, Hook.. thankyou. It seems there is hope


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MaryH on 2009 May 29, 12:50:41
Thanks for the clean up. I will do better next time. Gotta re-read all my post before submitting.
How embarrassing-to be caught having a glitch in the post when I'm talking about proper grammar and spelling. Oh, the horror!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 12:52:09
Now that, was a polite reply, Hook.. thankyou. It seems there is hope

Silly Jenni!  There IS no hope! :D

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 12:53:01
*smacks it with a rolled up newspaper*

DON'T DOUBLE POST, BAD GIRL! VERY BAD GIRL!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 May 29, 12:53:19
Now that, was a polite reply, Hook.. thankyou. It seems there is hope

Hey moron, don't double post. The edit button exists for a reason. Use it.

'Lol..' seriously that's all i have to say to both your replies. You are so closed minded you can't see the grey inbetween. Well i tried to put another point across but you're not having any of it so i suppose it's just another shame. Oh gosh, i used wiggles to emphasize my name, that MUST mean i'm a pleb. And my attitude? It's a good one to have, i'm proud of it, i know i'm a fair person. Don't worry though you can have your little obsession back, i can see your never going to open your eyes. Would just be nice if you were nicer to people even when you want to get a grammar point across.

Yes, please do come into my house and tell me how to clean my floor. It's not at all rude.

Actually, I've found the people here to be plenty nice. I have a theory that this is because I'm not a hopelessly ignorant tard.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dorquemada on 2009 May 29, 12:54:53
Miss SquiggleNicetyniceySquiggle, you're getting incoherent on top of tedious. And, well, if you don't like it here, why won't you just go and find somewhere you'll belong? In fact, I know just the place you could fit in. (http://lleo.aha.ru/na/en/)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 12:57:14
Actually, I've found the people here to be plenty nice. I have a theory that this is because I'm not a hopelessly ignorant tard.

That's exactly how things are - if you take the time to read the FAQ and don't act like a raving piece of crotch-rot, you'll be accepted and fit in without problems. It's MATY, not nuclear physics...I fail to see how it can be so impossibly hard for some people to grasp the concepts.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: msalwaysright on 2009 May 29, 13:01:36
'Lol..' seriously that's all i have to say to both your replies. You are so closed minded you can't see the grey inbetween. Well i tried to put another point across but you're not having any of it so i suppose it's just another shame. Oh gosh, i used wiggles to emphasize my name, that MUST mean i'm a pleb. And my attitude? It's a good one to have, i'm proud of it, i know i'm a fair person. Don't worry though you can have your little obsession back, i can see your never going to open your eyes. Would just be nice if you were nicer to people even when you want to get a grammar point across.

Apparently, even though you got several memos, you understood none of them. Nice & MATY are not a chocolate and peanut butter type thing. They do not mix.
Also, unless you plan to write us some lovely beat poems about spring and prostitutes, please capitalize your 'i's.
Thank you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 13:03:09
You do realise how contradictive you all are though right? Because everytime you call me a name or tedious etc. etc, you really are also describing yourselves. Why can't anyone have a calm and mature conversation without all sorts thrown in? And i don't know how i have not shown understanding of your concept of how this site works. And i'm not even one of the type's of people that plaster smilies and 'txtspk' everywhere. All i like is friendliness.

Oh and Edit (should keep you happy): capital i's will make no bloody difference, so no


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 13:05:17
You do realise how contradictive you all are though right? Because everytime you call me a name or tedious etc. etc, you really are also describing yourselves. Why can't anyone have a calm and mature conversation without all sorts thrown in? And I don't know how I have not shown understanding of your concept of how this site works. And I'm not even one of the types of people that plaster smilies and 'txtspk' everywhere. All I like is friendliness.

It puts the lotion on its skin, or it gets the hose again.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GloamingMerle on 2009 May 29, 13:06:30
I don't know how well youtube linkage will be appreciated, but every time I read this thread it makes me think of this (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mj6QqCH7g0Q&feature=channel_page).

P.S. Gay Asian Kitten FTW.

For SimplyComplex: I was debating on whether or not to watch you get eaten alive, but I decided to say something. I tend to be a 'nice' guy, yet manage not to get torn to shreds on this website. Consider that fact as I bestow upon you some very valuable advice: Being full of sugar and spice is ultimately your prerogative, and therefore should only affect you. Being a sensitive person doesn't necessarily make you a target on this forum until you begin preaching about morality. This forum is not the real world, there are no injustices to fight, and no one is forcing you to be here. For your own sanity and ours, if you can't handle the brusque atmosphere, then find somewhere else to play.

Some teasing, and insults are simply things to be expected here, and so what if they are? Letting anonymous people over the internet get under your skin is just plain silly. Being a part of this forum means pulling on your big boy/girl pants and understanding that these are people you will most likely NEVER meet in the real world, and therefore anything said or done here should NOT be taken personally.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: iHateyou on 2009 May 29, 13:06:40
You do realise how contradictive you all are though right? Because everytime you call me a name or tedious etc. etc, you really are also describing yourselves. Why can't anyone have a calm and mature conversation without all sorts thrown in? And i don't know how i have not shown understanding of your concept of how this site works. And i'm not even one of the type's of people that plaster smilies and 'txtspk' everywhere. All i like is friendliness.

Jesus, you just don't get it. These are not nice friendly people. If you don't like how they talk to you, stop talking to them. Lurk around, absorb the helpful information, and stay out of the bullshit. If you want a nice friendly forum, go find one, because this isn't it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 29, 13:08:39
You do realise how contradictive you all are though right? Because everytime you call me a name or tedious etc. etc, you really are also describing yourselves. Why can't anyone have a calm and mature conversation without all sorts thrown in? And i don't know how i have not shown understanding of your concept of how this site works. And i'm not even one of the type's of people that plaster smilies and 'txtspk' everywhere. All i like is friendliness.

Ah, that's where you make your mistake.  MATY is not friendliness, MATY is not calm and mature conversation.  MATY is grabbing a file, ripping into it, talking about the guts of the quivering beast, and then twisting them into a suitable pretzel for everyone's enjoyment.

Hang around for a while and lurk.  For about 3 years.  Then you might understand.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dorquemada on 2009 May 29, 13:08:49
Because everytime you call me a name or tedious etc. etc, you really are also describing yourselves.

"No U!" as an argument? Rly?  ;D

Quote
Why can't anyone have a calm and mature conversation without all sorts thrown in?

Mature conversation with someone who uses "No U!" as an argument? Rly?  ;D


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 May 29, 13:09:28
You do realise how contradictive you all are though right? Because everytime you call me a name or tedious etc. etc, you really are also describing yourselves. Why can't anyone have a calm and mature conversation without all sorts thrown in? And i don't know how i have not shown understanding of your concept of how this site works. And i'm not even one of the type's of people that plaster smilies and 'txtspk' everywhere. All i like is friendliness.

You're being defensive.

As kiki and I have already said, we're really very friendly as long you are not a fucking tard. Clearly, you are a tard, ergo we will make fun of you. The fact that you Don't Get This Concept makes me wonder if you have Assburgers. 'Cause rufio doesn't get it either and he's got Assburgers.

PROTIP: When typing the letter "i" in reference to yourself, first hold down the shift key and then press the letter "i".



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 May 29, 13:11:41
You do realise how contradictive you all are though right? Because everytime you call me a name or tedious etc. etc, you really are also describing yourselves.

Wrong. We stay where we belong and where we like to stay. We don't go to your forum to harass you. It's called politeness.

Why can't anyone have a calm and mature conversation without all sorts thrown in? And i don't know how i have not shown understanding of your concept of how this site works. And i'm not even one of the type's of people that plaster smilies and 'txtspk' everywhere. All i like is friendliness.

What part of "NO" you didn't understand?
How many people have to repeat that MATY works in this way, we like it as is, and this is NOT about friendliness, AT ALL?
Did you ever READ what has been posted here since?

Oh and Edit (should keep you happy): capital i's will make no bloody difference, so no

Wrong. Capital I makes difference here. You don't like it, you go away. Period.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 13:12:26
I suppose i'm the type of person who tries to fight their moral corner a little too much. Can't help it. And for the second time, i do get the concept. Of course i'm being defensive, i want to live in a nice world, nice people defend, not nice people attack. But jeez, yes i get the concept! I will get on with it. But i'm not a tard just because i fought from a different corner for a while.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zucabr on 2009 May 29, 13:14:38
I got confused somewhere along the way in this thread.

To borrow a quote from the beautiful Patrick Bateman, I fail to see how this is my problem.

There's a gay-for-pay (allegedly straight but has gay sex) porn actor who goes by the same name: Patrick Bateman. At first glance, I'd thought it was him you were referring to, but I realized that that probably wasn't right. Luckily, Google doesn't even know who the porn actor is. :P

And now I'm not confused. So I shall go wash my hands three times now, instead of doing groanings.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 May 29, 13:15:37
I suppose i'm the type of person who tries to fight their moral corner a little too much. Can't help it. And for the second time, i do get the concept. Of course i'm being defensive, i want to live in a nice world, nice people defend, not nice people attack. But jeez, yes i get the concept! I will get on with it. But i'm not a tard just because i fought from a different corner for a while.

Yes, it does make you a tard. Especially for STILL NOT GETTING that you should capitalize your I's.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 13:17:28
I already said i'm not going to bother capitalizing my i's. Maybe YOU are the tard for not having read that.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: nanacake on 2009 May 29, 13:17:59
I is a proper pronoun, even I know that and English is not my first language. Which is never an excuse but a good reason for learning from native speakers when they correct your mistakes. With understanding for slip ups because of typing in a rush (you tend to miss stuff when flowing with a thought) doing it on purpose is quite irritating. It's OK if you messed up first time, but after the warning ignoring it... well this is useless. Like talking to a wall. There isn't so much Ban Hammer here though because it's more fun for MATY to eat you alive, I think so.  :D Good Times lol


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: caterpillar on 2009 May 29, 13:18:30
I suppose i'm the type of person who tries to fight their moral corner a little too much. Can't help it. And for the second time, i do get the concept. Of course i'm being defensive, i want to live in a nice world, nice people defend, not nice people attack. But jeez, yes i get the concept! I will get on with it. But i'm not a tard just because i fought from a different corner for a while.

Most of the forums out there are 'nice', just the way you want it. It is rude of you to come in here and argue that we should also be nice because that's the way you like it. If you don't like this forum, go post in one you do like. Stop telling this forum how you want it to be.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tyyppi on 2009 May 29, 13:20:19
So don't bother capitalizing your I's then. Maybe you should replace them with Ö's too. Ö think that would be, like, really cool.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 May 29, 13:20:36
I got confused somewhere along the way in this thread.

To borrow a quote from the beautiful Patrick Bateman, I fail to see how this is my problem.

There's a gay-for-pay (allegedly straight but has gay sex) porn actor who goes by the same name: Patrick Bateman. At first glance, I'd thought it was him you were referring to, but I realized that that probably wasn't right. Luckily, Google doesn't even know who the porn actor is. :P

And now I'm not confused. So I shall go wash my hands three times now, instead of doing groanings.

Thanks for sharing? I'm confused as to why you would bother telling us this though. I mean, there's no links to actual porn and allegedly we can't Google this porn star, so what's the point?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Frankenbeasley on 2009 May 29, 13:20:46
So i've been called a fuckwit because i showed a bit of empathy to either side? Wow, well thats polite for sure. I'd say not calling someone a name is more polite than if you spell the sentence wrong. That is all i was saying.

No, you have been called a fuckwit both because I like the term and to provide an example of the fact that the normal rules of politeness are more than a little warped here. The fact is that the use of pejorative terminology towards your fellow posters is not regarded as rude at MATY. Indeed, one might almost conclude that vituperative comments and ad hominem attacks are, if anything, seen as de rigeur. Should you care to investigate the forum as a whole you would soon see that derogatory terminology, insinuation, and even spectacularly insulting lies are not reserved solely for the neophyte posters but are bandied about gleefully amongst even the most venerable MATYzens.

Which being said, of course, MATY regulars do, indeed, tend to give new arrivals a particularly hard time. This serves several purposes. Firstly, it allows us to winnow the recent intake. Those who survive the onslaught with their good grace intact, those who adjust their posting habits in light of the relentless sporking, or those who fight their corner with humour and zeal, they are the wheat from the apocalyptic harvest and they are, quite rightly, retained and valued. Those who display butthurt, meanwhile, or who fail to take on board the viciously-delivered lesson, are considered to be the chaff and are left to blow away in the sour wind of failure. Secondly, it discourages at least some contributors from continuing to repeat their mistakes, whether that be by means of taking the time to couch their messages in terminology and structure that is less likely to attract the opprobrium of the MATY regulars or, alternatively, by simply not posting so frequently, if at all. Thirdly, and this, perhaps, is the most important purpose of all, it affords us a great deal of entertainment, both from the inept flailings of those who take it all to heart and from the simple enjoyment to be garnered from witnessing an exquisitely barbed dart being delivered with precision and style.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 May 29, 13:21:01
I already said i'm not going to bother capitalizing my i's. Maybe YOU are the tard for not having read that.

I don't care if you "won't bother" with it. We're saying do it or GTFO. You do not seem to understand this. This makes you a tard. You have been told, repeatedly, to follow our rules or go away. How is this so hard to grasp? Post properly or not at all. OK? OK.

Also, stop abusing your poor language. What has it ever done to you?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: snowbawl on 2009 May 29, 13:26:29
Do you feel important enough to capitalize your "I(s)"?  I do.  See how easy that is?  Self-importance through better capitalization...screw your morals.  No one cares.

This is an intelligent forum of intelligent people who put a lot of hard work and effort on their own time, without being paid, in order to help you and possibly make your game better.  The least, the very least you can do is show a little thanks and respect by posting like you are not, in fact, an idiot.  Pretend if you must.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 13:30:21
If the site owner tells me to spell my i's as capitals then i will, thats fair enough. But to say someone isn't intelligent all because of a capital here and there on a forum? Come on, please. Like intelligence comes down to that. You could be a bloody heart surgeon yet be dyslexic. I thought you also said tedious people were tards.. well thats you all still included. My god, now it's all coming down to an 'i'. I I I I I I I I I I I I I oooooo bet you feel good now! Have you got tingles.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: spookymuffin on 2009 May 29, 13:30:43
If only there was some way for new members to get a feel for how things work around here before they go and make fools of themselves...  ::)

Like intelligence comes down to that.

Intelligent people can make mistakes, yes, but the difference between them and you is that they take the criticism given to them and try to learn from it. They don't throw a hissy fit when someone presents them with the opportunity to better themselves.

SimplyComplex, if you don't like how people interact with each other here then don't get involved; your opinion is not that valuable or important. I don't know why you feel the need to try and point out the "error" of our ways, in doing so you are being much more rude than the people you are criticising.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 May 29, 13:32:19
If the site owner tells me to spell my i's as capitals then i will, thats fair enough. But to say someone isn't intelligent all because of a capital here and there on a forum? Come on, please. Like intelligence comes down to that. You could be a bloody heart surgeon yet be dyslexic. I thought you also said tedious people were tards.. well thats you all still included. My god, now it's all coming down to an 'i'. I I I I I I I I I I I I I oooooo bet you feel good now! Have you got tingles.
Look, site owners are busy people. We have Grammar Police for that. Notice how OTHER sites have piles of moderators, but *WE* have GRAMMAR POLICE. There's a reason for that. Quit being a stupid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 13:32:28
Hmm, yeah, because asking why people are so harsh is more rude than calling a stranger a fuck-whatever. Ok.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 13:37:20
Hmm, yeah, because asking why people are so harsh is more rude than calling a stranger a fuck-whatever. Ok.

You now understand MATY! :D

El Presidente has spoken.  Please use proper capitalization and punctuation and spelling and grammar.  You'll be glad you did.

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zucabr on 2009 May 29, 13:37:42
Blah blah.

To borrow a quote from the beautiful Patrick Bateman, I fail to see how this is my problem.

Waffle/woolgathering.

Thanks for sharing? I'm confused as to why you would bother telling us this though.
No reason, really.
I mean, there's no links to actual porn and allegedly we can't Google this porn star, so what's the point?

http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/71077
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/72651
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/85153
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/85429
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/90113
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/90259

Or was that a rhetorical statement?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 13:39:14
Well i (shit no what was i thinking, so close),  'I' strangely enjoyed this.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: caterpillar on 2009 May 29, 13:40:05
Hmm, yeah, because asking why people are so harsh is more rude than calling a stranger a fuck-whatever. Ok.

You asked, and you were told that it's because we like it that way. You then proceeded to lecture that we are wrong, and that we should change to suit you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 May 29, 13:40:40
Hmm, yeah, because asking why people are so harsh is more rude than calling a stranger a fuck-whatever. Ok.

Yes, it is. You're new here. Do you walk into your neighbors house and start to criticize how they clean? Do you stop strangers on the street and ask them why they are wearing plaid shorts with a paisley shirt? You don't do those things because it's rude. Same thing applies to Internet communities. This is our house. Follow our rules and social conventions.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 29, 13:41:46
Hmm, yeah, because asking why people are so harsh is more rude than calling a stranger a fuck-whatever. Ok.

Fuck-knuckle, sweetheart. I called you a fuck-knuckle. *pet pet*


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 29, 13:47:30
Well i (shit no what was i thinking, so close),  'I' strangely enjoyed this.

LOL!  Yes, that's another thing that MATY is for -- enjoying in a strange way.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 13:47:49
A) 'I' said fuck-whatever because different words including fuck were said.
B) 'I' never said anyone should change to suit me.. this is where your paranoia comes in
C) Actually in places when people were getting unfairly treated i WOULD interfere.

Your one type of person, and 'I'm another so don't tell me what 'I'm doing, what 'I' might do or the manner in which 'I'm saying something.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 29, 13:49:28
Your one type of person,

You're.  For "You are".



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tigerlilley on 2009 May 29, 13:59:12
We need a sheep bingo.  Squares can include:
"Grammar doesn't matter"
"There's no need to be mean"
"I work in _ in real life, I know more than you, why you make fun?"
"WWJD"
"I am dyslexic"

Extra BBS style square:
"OMG, what if there are children here? Will you be mean to them too?"


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: caterpillar on 2009 May 29, 14:00:57
A) 'I' said fuck-whatever because different words including fuck were said.
B) 'I' never said anyone should change to suit me.. this is where your paranoia comes in
C) Actually in places when people were getting unfairly treated i WOULD interfere.

Your one type of person, and 'I'm another so don't tell me what 'I'm doing, what 'I' might do or the manner in which 'I'm saying something.

You never used the words 'you should change to suit me', but you did point out that we are not polite and implied that we should be, and gave pointers about different ways we could go about it.

So what reaction would you give your child (if you have/had one), say a teenager who had accidently spelled something wrong. If you told them how to spell it properly you wouldn't use any of the language that people use in here. My only point is that on forums where you get people from everywhere, you are going to get mistakes, some people are just excited about getting a point across or something so rush the message. When you read over it, it really doesn't matter if 'their' or 'there' is round the wrong way. It's the content that should be important. But even if you can't help but get bothered by it, there's different ways of going about it. That's all


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 May 29, 14:08:34
B) 'I' never said anyone should change to suit me.. this is where your paranoia comes in

And since when, forcing other people in their home to suffer your annoyance is polite? You're demanding we change in people who don't care about your rudeness, so yes, you said that.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 14:13:48
So even if 'I' did point out things, that still wasn't saying you should change, so 'I' was right. And i've also not demanded anything. It's like you've had your own conversation with me where you've decided what i've said. If you don't think you are doing anything wrong then perhaps i'm not doing anything wrong either. It works both ways, but you seem to think only your way is the right way. I said yonks ago that 'I' get the concept of this site and i'll get on with it, but you still can't stop at that. Everything i've said had got twisted anyway so my original posts have become something they were never meant to be.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 May 29, 14:20:08
Snuffelbutt, if all of us are reading your posts in this way and that's not what you were trying to say, maybe you should be more careful of how you express yourself. You can't really expect us to know what you mean if it is not what you write, can you?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 14:22:18
As far as i knew 'I' wrote how 'I' meant things to be taken, but 'I' mustn't have written it easy enough for you because it ended up not being taken that way. So perhaps we BOTH made a mistake. Maybe you should have been more careful how you took it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 May 29, 14:24:54
What I am saying is that all the regulars here, plus some helpful long-lurking n00bs have interpreted your posts in the same way. Not just me. If we are not getting what you mean, you should express it differently.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 14:26:07
And maybe you should open your minds to the fact people can mean things differently to how you would assume.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CharleeRose on 2009 May 29, 14:30:21
As far as i knew 'I' wrote how 'I' meant things to be taken, but 'I' mustn't have written it easy enough for you because it ended up not being taken that way. So perhaps we BOTH made a mistake. Maybe you should have been more careful how you took it.

Okay, stop with the 'I' crap.  That is childish and definitely not what was asked of you.  Your obvious butthurt over being told that you're not following the forum rules is just showing again with this latest post you've made.  Just stop arguing and trying to justify your stupidity already and get with the program or leave.  It's simple really, and you're not doing yourself any favors by keeping this up.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 29, 14:31:15
And maybe you should open your minds to the fact people can mean things differently to how you would assume.

Different "from", not "to".  There is so much that is grammatically wrong with that sentence.  Tut.

But really, this is degenerating into "Didn't!"  "Did too!"





Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 14:35:01
There ya go, someone else who has told me what i am apparently feeling and apparently doing. And being just as tedious as me. Childish to make an 'I' standout, but not childish to pull up every typo? Again, okaaaay. And if i'm like that why do you feel the need to HAVE to say something. Anyway i said my piece, you all said yours, no ones been wrong. A site has the right to ask for something, i had the right to stand up for people not deserving names of all kinds. Both disagree with the other but i had posted telling i understood. I'ts kinda been over for ages now.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 29, 14:44:39
There ya go, someone else who has told me what i am apparently feeling and apparently doing. And being just as tedious as me. Childish to make an 'I' standout, but not childish to pull up every typo? Again, okaaaay. And if i'm like that why do you feel the need to HAVE to say something.

LOL.  I don't know about everyone else, but for me?  It's because it's Friday afternoon, it's so hot that all the cats are drowsing in the shade, my hard drive is taking forever to defrag and it's more fun to prod the MATY forum than anything else right now.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: msalwaysright on 2009 May 29, 14:45:54
And maybe you should open your minds to the fact people can mean things differently to how you would assume.

So, you're saying we should redefine the actual meanings of words and phrases to fit whatever it is you're trying
to express?
That's a fantastic idea and I'm sure it will be implemented right away.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 14:51:41
No, i was simply saying that you're fast to blame me for the fact you took me the wrong way, without thinking that perhaps you had something to do with it too. And again, assuming the way i said something. If i had meant to say 'you should redefine the actual meanings of words and phrases to fit whatever someone is trying to say', i would have said that. So please just stop jumping to the worst possible side of the spectrum of what one can mean.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CharleeRose on 2009 May 29, 14:54:42
We can only take things the way you type them.  That is what everyone is saying.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 29, 14:58:00
If we all typed our words without taking any care to make them form sentences that mean what we wish to say to the majority of people who read them, then we would be unable to communicate effectively.






Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 29, 14:58:48
Blah blah.

To borrow a quote from the beautiful Patrick Bateman, I fail to see how this is my problem.

Waffle/woolgathering.

Thanks for sharing? I'm confused as to why you would bother telling us this though.
No reason, really.
I mean, there's no links to actual porn and allegedly we can't Google this porn star, so what's the point?

http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/71077
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/72651
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/85153
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/85429
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/90113
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/90259

Or was that a rhetorical statement?

Hooray! This noob brings us gay pronreaux! I vote we keep this one.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: tizerist on 2009 May 29, 14:59:20
The simple truth is this: these people are not capable of dictating terms to another human face-to-face, so they take the easier (and slightly cowardly) alternative - to attack and gang up on 12 year olds on the internet, who dared to make a spelling mistake.
And how pitiful are thee.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: msalwaysright on 2009 May 29, 15:00:52
We can only take things the way you type them.  That is what everyone is saying.

Precisely.
Everyone is 'blaming you' for having failed to express yourself clearly because you failed to express yourself clearly.
If you frequent other forums, you may be aware that each has it's own standards and codes of conduct. Such is the case with MATY.

You are being cited for failure to comply. Lack of compliance generally results in being poked with sharp sticks and eventually killed with fire.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 15:11:36
It's not as simple as that because they came back at me telling me i meant things that i had never written. Twisting ways i had worded things. Like some of the examples i brought up. The words i use are the words i mean, if i don't say things like 'i think you should all change for me' then thats what i meant to not put. But i've had people coming back to me with 'oh so you want us to change for you' type thing. Near the beginning i said how a spelling mistake is so bad, and i got things back saying that you basically have no intelligence if you don't capitalize something etc. So from asking an innocent enough question, people make it personal by stating what a person is if they don't spell the way THEY want. Then telling me how i don't get the way it works here even though more than once i had stated i understood. So if i took care to make it clear i understood, yet still got people repeating themselves that i didn't, just who has made the mistake there. Not me! Bottom line on the subject of this thread though, is that this site would still be good and non-n00bish even if people forgot the odd apostrophe or capital. The odd grammar drop isn't the same as people coming on going 'yo peepz, sims 3 iz da bomb (or not as the case may be) ^.^ w00t'. And it seems to be that people don't want THAT type on here?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Soggy Fox on 2009 May 29, 15:16:39
Oh, and I'm dyslexic.  Do you know what I do when typing?  Unless I'm in an MMO and about to die, I -spellcheck-.  I make sure my spelling makes sense because 'hsit' does not make sense, but this does.

And when I have typed in another language, I do the same thing, since with my limited vocabulary, I could accidentally say that my mother is a kumquat, which also would make no sense.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Carokube on 2009 May 29, 15:22:40
This thread has murdered me from the laughing.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 15:23:14
It's just that in this day its natural to not worry too much about grammar on the net. And we're not even talking about jumbled up words here, they're on about things like not capitalising an 'I'. While some people may be anal about spelling, this type of mishap won't in any way affect a post.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 May 29, 15:23:40
I could accidentally say that my mother is a kumquat, which also would make no sense.
Judging by your avatar, I'd say that would make perfect sense.

It's just that in this day its natural to not worry too much about grammar on the net. And we're not even talking about jumbled up words here, they're on about things like not capitalising an 'I'. While some people may be anal about spelling, this type of mishap won't in any way affect a post.

You can't call it a mishap when you've clearly indicated that you're doing it intentionally.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: msalwaysright on 2009 May 29, 15:25:27
It's not as simple as that because they came back at me telling me i meant things that i had never written. Twisting ways i had worded things. Like some of the examples i brought up. The words i use are the words i mean, if i don't say things like 'i think you should all change for me' then thats what i meant to not put. But i've had people coming back to me with 'oh so you want us to change for you' type thing. Near the beginning i said how a spelling mistake is so bad, and i got things back saying that you basically have no intelligence if you don't capitalize something etc. So from asking an innocent enough question, people make it personal by stating what a person is if they don't spell the way THEY want. Then telling me how i don't get the way it works here even though more than once i had stated i understood. So if i took care to make it clear i understood, yet still got people repeating themselves that i didn't, just who has made the mistake there. Not me! Bottom line on the subject of this thread though, is that this site would still be good and non-n00bish even if people forgot the odd apostrophe or capital. The odd grammar drop isn't the same as people coming on going 'yo peepz, sims 3 iz da bomb (or not as the case may be) ^.^ w00t'. And it seems to be that people don't want THAT type on here?

That's what you meant to not put? Well congratulations, you not putted the hell out of it.

We keep saying that you don't understand because you are not making any changes in your behavior that show you understand.
Your post above is not 'lacking the odd apostrophe', it's riddled with errors and just damn annoying to read.
This what we DO NOT WANT.

And they aren't asking you to spell the way they want, they're asking you spell things the way they are spelled. Spelling is not
subjective, you nit.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: mibsywibsy on 2009 May 29, 15:25:48
The simple truth is this: these people are not capable of dictating terms to another human face-to-face, so they take the easier (and slightly cowardly) alternative - to attack and gang up on 12 year olds on the internet, who dared to make a spelling mistake.

You do realize that '12s' does not actually refer to twelve year olds, right? Right?

Quote
And how pitiful are thee.

Just fucking kill yourself.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 15:27:04
Jenni, some friendly advice.  You can't win, as hundreds have found out before you.  Don't fight it.  Clean up your posts as best you can, and don't argue with the criticisms.  Every word you type in your own defense is a word you aren't typing in a contribution to the game.

For most of us, lousy grammar/spelling/capitalization/punctuation/usage is annoying.  So at least try, ok?

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GloamingMerle on 2009 May 29, 15:28:09

Hooray! This noob brings us gay pronreaux! I vote we keep this one.

Aforementioned noob does appear to have some authority on gay pr0n, which is a highly marketable skill of course.. It would behoove us to accept him into the fold.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 29, 15:29:24

Hooray! This noob brings us gay pronreaux! I vote we keep this one.

Aforementioned noob does appear to have some authority on gay pr0n, which is a highly marketable skill of course.. It would behoove us to accept him into the fold.

Hey Merle, long time no peep. Glad you are undaunted by our vish 12s.  ;)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 15:34:09
Thats just the way i type. I don't use silly n00b speak, or 'pmsl' everywhere, but yeah, i do cut corners with capital I's. And it's not riddled with errors. And 'in your opinion is annoying', yes. I also love the way you use 'we' to refer to yourselves. It's like your a cult or something. You seem to forget you don't own the site, even if you feel you are some type of minion. Pescado hasn't once really said anything himself about how to behave with grammar, this thread wasn't even created by him! I said i understood, now you are telling me AGAIN that i don't and telling me the reason why you think it. I'm careful that i type things to an 'alright' standard, but i know i just won't be able to keep to making sure every tiny thing is done 'the proper' way. And it has nothing to so with doing it 'intentionally'. It's my habit, but it gets me by. If the guy in charge asks me to try harder than perhaps it's more worth thinking about.  

I'm not trying to 'win' anything. Was just having a conversation


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 29, 15:35:31
Thats just the way i type. I don't use silly n00b speak, or 'pmsl' everywhere, but yeah, i do cut corners with capital I's. And it's not riddled with errors. And 'in your opinion is annoying', yes. I also love the way you use 'we' to refer to yourselves. It's like your a cult or something. You seem to forget you don't own the site, even if you feel you are some type of minion. Pescado hasn't once really said anything himself about how to behave with grammar, this thread wasn't even created by him! I said i understood, now you are telling me AGAIN that i don't and telling me the reason why you think it. I'm careful that i type things to an 'alright' standard, but i know i just won't be able to keep to making sure every tiny thing is done 'the proper' way. And it has nothing to so with doing it 'intentionally'. It's my habit, but it gets me by. If the guy in charge asks me to try harder than perhaps it's more worth thinking about.  

GO MASTURBATE ON LJ, WDC.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: snowbawl on 2009 May 29, 15:36:00
Then telling me how i don't get the way it works here even though more than once i had stated i understood. So if i took care to make it clear i understood, yet still got people repeating themselves that i didn't, just who has made the mistake there. Not me! Bottom line on the subject of this thread though, is that this site would still be good and non-n00bish even if people forgot the odd apostrophe or capital. The odd grammar drop isn't the same as people coming on going 'yo peepz, sims 3 iz da bomb (or not as the case may be) ^.^ w00t'. And it seems to be that people don't want THAT type on here?

If you understand, why are you continuing to post like an idiot without proper capitalization?  Do you think you are going to win the day with all your "i mean this, i mean that, by all means i understands?"  We repeat ourselves because you seem to need the repetition in order to learn.  Rather like a dog learning a new trick, you are.  Sadly, most dogs would have learned by now.  You are the unfortunate tard dog that insists on pissing the rug though it should know better.  You will be assessed and treated as such.  Enjoy your time here, SimplyStupid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GloamingMerle on 2009 May 29, 15:36:51

Hooray! This noob brings us gay pronreaux! I vote we keep this one.

Aforementioned noob does appear to have some authority on gay pr0n, which is a highly marketable skill of course.. It would behoove us to accept him into the fold.

Hey Merle, long time no peep. Glad you are undaunted by our vish 12s.  ;)

Oh, no worries... I'll probably go MIA again in less than a week, completely independent of 12s population. It is my way.

On the other hand, you may see me around.. I'm desperate to mod the cocoon baby blanket and pudding-face textures. Only time will tell.  ;)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jack Rudd on 2009 May 29, 15:39:42
Proper capitalization is important, SimplyComplex. As you will know if you have ever had to help your uncle Jack off a horse.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 15:40:58
Well i may not spell like some people want me to, but i have more intelligence than to resort to stupid name calling.

Does jacking off a cat count? Because i've done that  :-X all in the name of vet care though lol.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: msalwaysright on 2009 May 29, 15:41:25
Thats just the way i type. I don't use silly n00b speak, or 'pmsl' everywhere, but yeah, i do cut corners with capital I's. And it's not riddled with errors. And 'in your opinion is annoying', yes. I also love the way you use 'we' to refer to yourselves. It's like your a cult or something. You seem to forget you don't own the site, even if you feel you are some type of minion. Pescado hasn't once really said anything himself about how to behave with grammar, this thread wasn't even created by him! I said i understood, now you are telling me AGAIN that i don't and telling me the reason why you think it. I'm careful that i type things to an 'alright' standard, but i know i just won't be able to keep to making sure every tiny thing is done 'the proper' way. And it has nothing to so with doing it 'intentionally'. It's my habit, but it gets me by. If the guy in charge asks me to try harder than perhaps it's more worth thinking about.  

*sigh* Typing to your 'alright standard' is not going to cut it here. Your 'alright' is our horrible. 'We', and 'our', meaning the majority of
people who are regular posters and who prefer this standard. The citizenry, the MATYians.
And what do you mean 'cut corners with capital I's'? The shift key is no further when typing an 'I' as it is for any other letter, and
there is no shortage of capital letters as far as I know.

Proper capitalization is important, SimplyComplex. As you will know if you have ever had to help your uncle Jack off a horse.
That was a brilliant, vivid illustration.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CharleeRose on 2009 May 29, 15:42:25
Thats just the way i type. I don't use silly n00b speak, or 'pmsl' everywhere, but yeah, i do cut corners with capital I's. And it's not riddled with errors. And 'in your opinion is annoying', yes. I also love the way you use 'we' to refer to yourselves. It's like your a cult or something. You seem to forget you don't own the site, even if you feel you are some type of minion. Pescado hasn't once really said anything himself about how to behave with grammar, this thread wasn't even created by him! I said i understood, now you are telling me AGAIN that i don't and telling me the reason why you think it. I'm careful that i type things to an 'alright' standard, but i know i just won't be able to keep to making sure every tiny thing is done 'the proper' way. And it has nothing to so with doing it 'intentionally'. It's my habit, but it gets me by. If the guy in charge asks me to try harder than perhaps it's more worth thinking about.  

I'm not trying to 'win' anything. Was just having a conversation

I really don't think you want Pes to come in here to tell you anything.  You're likely to just get summarily nuked if he has to trouble himself with you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TashaYarrr on 2009 May 29, 15:42:51
It's just that in this day its natural to not worry too much about grammar on the net

There are so many things wrong with this I can't even pick one to start with.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 15:44:57
Yet you had to take the time to state it?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: phyllis_p on 2009 May 29, 15:45:47
It's like your you're a cult or something. You seem to forget you don't own the site, even if you feel you are some type of minion. Pescado hasn't once really said anything himself about how to behave with grammar, this thread wasn't even created by him! (snip) If the guy in charge asks me to try harder than perhaps it's more worth thinking about.  


Grammar Police has been sanctioned by JMP.  He is a manager who knows how to delegate.

Read the FAQ (also sanctioned by JMP).  Stop acting like a 12.  

We ARE a cult, you know.  And we don't like you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 May 29, 15:50:41
You do realize that '12s' does not actually refer to twelve year olds, right? Right?
Uh, yes. Yes it does.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 15:51:10
Oh i'm just distraught.. Really.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: toad on 2009 May 29, 15:55:50
That's just the way I type. I don't use silly n00b speak, or 'pmsl' everywhere, but yeah, I do cut corners with capital I's. And it's not riddled with errors. And 'in your opinion is annoying', yes. I also love the way you use 'we' to refer to yourselves. It's like you're a cult or something. You seem to forget you don't own the site, even if you feel you are some type of minion. Pescado hasn't once really said anything himself about how to behave with grammar, this thread wasn't even created by him! I said I understood, now you are telling me AGAIN that I don't and telling me the reason why you think it. I'm careful thatI type things to an 'alright' standard,I take care to type things to an 'alright' standard, but I know I just won't be able to keep to making sure every tiny thing is done 'the proper' way. And it has nothing to so with doing it 'intentionally'. It's my habit, but it gets me by. If the guy in charge asks me to try harder than perhaps it's more worth thinking about.  

I'm not trying to 'win' anything. Was just having a conversation.

Pescado TOLD you IN THIS THREAD that he delegates to Grammar Police, dumbass.  Also, make LESS mistakes when you're telling people you "understand" otherwise you end up sounding like a moron who doesn't understand, surprisingly enough.  Your writing IS riddled with errors, and it seems like you haven't taken the care to even think about what you're typing, let alone check it for mistakes.

If the site owner tells me to spell my i's as capitals then i will, thats fair enough. But to say someone isn't intelligent all because of a capital here and there on a forum? Come on, please. Like intelligence comes down to that. You could be a bloody heart surgeon yet be dyslexic. I thought you also said tedious people were tards.. well thats you all still included. My god, now it's all coming down to an 'i'. I I I I I I I I I I I I I oooooo bet you feel good now! Have you got tingles.
Look, site owners are busy people. We have Grammar Police for that. Notice how OTHER sites have piles of moderators, but *WE* have GRAMMAR POLICE. There's a reason for that. Quit being a stupid.

How clear does he have to be, exactly?  You do NOT want him coming to your house to explain it to you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: mibsywibsy on 2009 May 29, 15:58:38
You do realize that '12s' does not actually refer to twelve year olds, right? Right?
Uh, yes. Yes it does.

SimplyWhatever was going on about it specifically in a way that indicated complete ignorance of Pescado-approved aging increments, though.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SimplyComplex on 2009 May 29, 16:00:42
That's another person to the list that has told me what i'm doing, AND resorted to name calling. Also, as i've said - i type what i mean to say.. so what the hell is the point in quoting me only to redo what i've typed. Dense or what.


You do realize that '12s' does not actually refer to twelve year olds, right? Right?
Uh, yes. Yes it does.

SimplyWhatever was going on about it specifically in a way that indicated complete ignorance of Pescado-approved aging increments, though.

Erm, i wasn't the one that said this sentence about 12 year olds. Oops@you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: daisywenham on 2009 May 29, 16:05:19
Quote
Then telling me how i don't get the way it works here even though more than once i had stated i understood. So if i took care to make it clear i understood, yet still got people repeating themselves that i didn't, just who has made the mistake there. Not me!

If you understood how it works here, you wouldn't continue to post comments full of un-capitalized "i"s and various other grammatical errors, while still expecting anyone here to take you seriously.  It. Will. Not. Happen.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TashaYarrr on 2009 May 29, 16:09:09
On the other hand, you may see me around.. I'm desperate to mod the cocoon baby blanket and pudding-face textures. Only time will tell.  ;)

I just caught this. Merle, I don't know you, but I see you are beloved around here. I will join your cult--and I do not join them lightly--if you were somehow to remove or improve the Larval Babies. I do not understand why there are Larval Babies. Their inflexible cocoons confuse and enrage me.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: phyllis_p on 2009 May 29, 16:10:51
Oh, look.  SimplyComplains got canned.  My day is complete :-)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: toad on 2009 May 29, 16:12:44
That's another person to the list that has told me what i'm doing, AND resorted to name calling. Also, as i've said - i type what i mean to say.. so what the hell is the point in quoting me only to redo what i've typed. Dense or what.

I quoted you to respond to you, which you would have noticed, had you bothered to read what I typed as well as my corrections.  I corrected your mistakes to show you that your posts are full of errors, even when you claim they're not.  People are resorting to name-calling because you don't seem to read anything other than insults.  If I am the dense one in this situation, I hate to think of the pressure placed on your spine by your head.  I told you what you were doing because you don't seem to know what you're doing - I did not make up anything about you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 May 29, 16:13:35
Oh, look.  SimplyComplains got canned.  My day is complete :-)

She wanted the FOJ to get involved, well, it looks like she got her wish. Congrats SimplyStupid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: snapzit on 2009 May 29, 16:15:32
And just when I was going to tell her to give birth to a pineapple backwards.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 29, 16:17:34
Hooray! Hope you enjoyed your time with the grownups, SimplyFucktarded. Enjoy your stay in RetardoLand. Meet your new cellmate, Celestard.

*puts a Will Wright mask on SimplyFucktarded*


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 May 29, 16:17:59
Oh, look.  SimplyComplains got canned.  My day is complete :-)

She wanted the FOJ to get involved, well, it looks like she got her wish. Congrats SimplyStupid.

Yes, one should be careful what one asks for, especially when one has already been told to BLS.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GloamingMerle on 2009 May 29, 16:19:54
On the other hand, you may see me around.. I'm desperate to mod the cocoon baby blanket and pudding-face textures. Only time will tell.  ;)

I just caught this. Merle, I don't know you, but I see you are beloved around here. I will join your cult--and I do not join them lightly--if you were somehow to remove or improve the Larval Babies. I do not understand why there are Larval Babies. Their inflexible cocoons confuse and enrage me.

Well, the larval babies obviously don't have any realistic animations under the blanket, as it would be useless to create animations you wouldn't be able to see. So removing the blanket would just result in a stiff mummy baby. I just figured I'd replace those awful, sexually stereotyped, abominations they've wrapped them in with something cute and neutral.. Like little fleece blankets with pastel stripes or stars.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: snowbawl on 2009 May 29, 16:24:23
Oh i'm just distraught.. Really.

No, you are an idiot that serves as a wonderful example to all other newcomers.  Assimilate or suffer the indignation.  Third option, get your insipid ass out of our clubhouse and go cry to your mommy.  Perhaps she will appreciate your gallant struggle to dumb-down the internet through baseless argument.  She might even place you in the princess chair with your special "i can type any way i feel 'cause i are smart on the inside" hat and throw you a fucking party.

Go whore yourself somewhere else.  We do not buy your ilk.

ETA:
A canning!  Congrats SimplyStupid, a party indeed.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Stitches on 2009 May 29, 16:25:00
Politeness: Not selfishly spamming an already totally overloaded board with unfounded self-righteousness* when many users have legitimate business to conduct.


*As opposed to my totally ...founded?... self-righteousness.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TashaYarrr on 2009 May 29, 16:26:18
Quote
Well, the larval babies obviously don't have any realistic animations under the blanket, as it would be useless to create animations you wouldn't be able to see. So removing the blanket would just result in a stiff mummy baby. I just figured I'd replace those awful, sexually stereotyped, abominations they've wrapped them in with something cute and neutral.. Like little fleece blankets with pastel stripes or stars.

Really? Somehow I'd convinced myself they'd copy-pasted the baby animations from TS2, and they were all occurring under there somewhere; but that someone had decided that what the next installment of the series really needed was sandworm-like swaddling cloths for the babbies.

Ah well.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: msalwaysright on 2009 May 29, 16:27:34
That's another person to the list that has told me what i'm doing, AND resorted to name calling. Also, as i've said - i type what i mean to say.. so what the hell is the point in quoting me only to redo what i've typed. Dense or what.

When you are responding to a specific person, it is the norm to quote specifically what they said that you are responding to. Unlike
yourself, most people do not just post in whatever way feels 'alright' to them.

They post so that other people can understand them, following guidelines that the general citizenry recognizes.

I just noticed that all of your arguments seem oddly familiar. I suspect you sprang full grown from our resident 'tard's thick head.
I don't think there's a position for a vice-tard, so you may go at any time.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 16:38:59
Since the tidal wave of sheep shows no sign of letting up, and the most important task is sorting the occasional nugget of wheat from the chaff, Pescado has strongly suggested that grammatical errors and other behaviour demanding the sharp spork be handled by a barrage of PMs, rather than excessive poking in the thread.

This is too choice. Pescado himself has decreed that the information is more important than the grammar and spelling.  

I was wondering how long the threadshitting would go on.  Got the inappropriate trait much?

This is a misreading. Pescado himself told the noobs to mind their expression, but since they won't listen he advocated a different form of action. That isn't a decree that information is more important, nor that the threadshitting was inherently wrong. Since it wasn't working, we are changing tactics.

Nice to see you are reacting to your ouster by becoming even more of an irrelevant jerk.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Frankenbeasley on 2009 May 29, 16:49:06

Hooray! This noob brings us gay pronreaux! I vote we keep this one.

Aforementioned noob does appear to have some authority on gay pr0n, which is a highly marketable skill of course.. It would behoove us to accept him into the fold.

Zucabr is not actually a n00b.

Quote
Name:  Zucabr
Posts:  13 (0.013 per day)
Position:  Asinine Airhead
Date Registered:  06-10-2006, 06:43:51
Last Active:  Today at 02:44:17

First post was 12 days after registration. All posts appear to have been grammatical and either constructive or humorous or both. Now he also provides pr0n.

Looks like we already kept him.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: originalhalf on 2009 May 29, 16:51:27
Hooray! Hope you enjoyed your time with the grownups, SimplyFucktarded. Enjoy your stay in RetardoLand. Meet your new cellmate, Celestard.
*puts a Will Wright mask on SimplyFucktarded*

This.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GloamingMerle on 2009 May 29, 16:57:14

Hooray! This noob brings us gay pronreaux! I vote we keep this one.

Aforementioned noob does appear to have some authority on gay pr0n, which is a highly marketable skill of course.. It would behoove us to accept him into the fold.

Zucabr is not actually a n00b.

Quote
Name:  Zucabr
Posts:  13 (0.013 per day)
Position:  Asinine Airhead
Date Registered:  06-10-2006, 06:43:51
Last Active:  Today at 02:44:17

First post was 12 days after registration. All posts appear to have been grammatical and either constructive or humorous or both. Now he also provides pr0n.

Looks like we already kept him.

You certainly do your homework. My apologies to the not-a-noob, then. Clearly Zucabr is an even more skilled lurker than I.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 May 29, 17:25:19
But no ones doing that, or only a tiny few. It's like you've become so paranoid and obsessed that you are trying to be 'changed' that you've spun it all out of proportion. People make spelling mistakes, it's one of those little things but there is no need to bring up people on every single one!

If you don't smack a pup with a rolled up paper, how will it learn not to go on your rug?
Actually, smacking a puppy with a rolled up paper is exactly the wrong way to go about it. All you teach the puppy is to be afraid of newspapers, and you. The correct training method is to scoop up the puppy as soon as it starts to squat, and place it outside. This would also be applicable in the case of dumbass shit-for-brains BBS refugees.

It's just that, in this day it's natural to not worry too much about grammar on the net. Oh fuck. Needs total re-write. "In this day and age, it's not natural to worry about grammar on the Internet."
And this is an excuse? Nay, this only proves that things have degenerated to unacceptable levels on forums at large. I'm sorry, but just because N99 jumps off a bridge, it doesn't mean MATY should.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jaccirocker on 2009 May 29, 17:28:50
Wow, this is why I stay in my corner and keep my mouth closed.

SimplyComplex and the rest of the please overlook my behavior/spelling/or what the fuck ever crew should take notes. MATY is full of knowledge and information however you will get more from observing rather than pressuring or ass kissing.

One last thing, you will never ever, ever fucking win. So give in or get out.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: EdenNintyNine on 2009 May 29, 17:55:16
Blah blah.

To borrow a quote from the beautiful Patrick Bateman, I fail to see how this is my problem.

Waffle/woolgathering.

Thanks for sharing? I'm confused as to why you would bother telling us this though.
No reason, really.
I mean, there's no links to actual porn and allegedly we can't Google this porn star, so what's the point?

http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/71077
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/72651
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/85153
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/85429
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/90113
http://www.gay-torrents.net/torrent/90259

Or was that a rhetorical statement?

Oh my! The first one with Leo was one I didn't have, thanks so much! (And it is nice to see someone else uses the same porn torrent site I use, it makes me feel all warm and fuzzy.)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 May 29, 17:57:39
Wow, this is why I stay in my corner and keep my mouth closed.

Yes you should have.

SimplyComplex and the rest of the please overlook my behavior/spelling/or what the fuck ever crew should take notes. MATY is full of knowledge and information however you will get more from observing rather than pressuring or ass kissing.

This sentence is incomprehensible.  It lacks proper punctuation, and is missing a somewhere in the sentence.  Might I encourage you to try a remedial English class?  LURK MOAR.

One last thing, you will never ever, ever fucking win. So give in or get out.

Good advice.  Take it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 17:59:12
That isn't a decree that information is more important, nor that the threadshitting was inherently wrong. Since it wasn't working, we are changing tactics.

How well has it ever worked, really?  You end up poking some animal with sharp sticks until it no longer recognizes friend from foe or El Presidente from the common rabble.  

Occasionally you get some idiot who defends typing in a monolithic block of all caps.  Those people, you go out of your way to hurt.  Badly.  This one was stupid enough to defend typing "I" in lower case.  Not as bad, but definitely deserved to have the transgressions pointed out.  If a few friendly reminders don't correct the behavior, THEN you escalate.  The boss who is forced to part an employee's hair with a monkey wrench has failed as a manager somewhere along the line.  If SC hadn't been totally on the defensive, you might have been able to change her behavior.

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 18:00:27
There were a number of friendly warnings issued.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 May 29, 18:08:39
It's not like our modus operandi is not well known around Sims forums.  Why n00bs come to MATY and feel that somehow the MATY culture just doesn't apply to them, because they're so speshul, is beyond my comprehension.

I mean, LOOK at this:
SimplyComplex and the rest of the please overlook my behavior/spelling/or what the fuck ever crew should take notes. MATY is full of knowledge and information however you will get more from observing rather than pressuring or ass kissing.

One last thing, you will never ever, ever fucking win. So give in or get out.

It's a parody - it's like one sheep trying to spork another sheep, for BEING a sheep.  No recognition that they're both mutton kebabs.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MickeyJR on 2009 May 29, 18:22:43
And it's not like our modus operandi is not well known around Sims forums.  Why n00bs come to MATY and feel that somehow the MATY culture just doesn't apply to them, because they're so speshul, is beyond my comprehension.

Most of us know using a conjunction to start a sentence is bad form in proper English and grammar. Conjunctions are used to connect words not start sentences.


EDIT: Corrected my own use of Conjunction at the start of a sentence. Stoopid me.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 18:25:50
Yet, most of us know using a conjunction to start a sentence is bad form in proper English and grammar. Conjunctions are used to connect words not start sentences.

But we do it anyway. :D :D :D

On the other hand, a preposition is a bad thing to end a sentence with.

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jaccirocker on 2009 May 29, 18:26:40
I'll just go back in my corner now. Thanks and bye.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 29, 18:28:21
And it's not like our modus operandi is not well known around Sims forums.  Why n00bs come to MATY and feel that somehow the MATY culture just doesn't apply to them, because they're so speshul, is beyond my comprehension.

Yet, most of us know using a conjunction to start a sentence is bad form in proper English and grammar. Conjunctions are used to connect words not start sentences.

This is an outdated rule and something that can be used occasionally for effect. I would question your comma use in that sentence, bee tee double u.

What next, arguing that we should adopt the new spelling of "cooky?"


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: msalwaysright on 2009 May 29, 18:31:08
I'm finding it incredibly ironic that it either refuses to capitalize the 'I', or leaves it out of the sentence altogether, but is so obviously full of self importance.
Why this aversion to giving the personal pronoun it's proper due, while insisting on special treatment for itself?

What manner of psychosis is this? Someone with learnings of psychology please explain.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 18:37:12
Yet, most of us know using a conjunction to start a sentence is bad form in proper English and grammar.

This is an outdated rule and something that can be used occasionally for effect. I would question your comma use in that sentence, bee tee double u.

What next, arguing that we should adopt the new spelling of "cooky?"

Did someone miss that mickeyjr started that sentence with a conjunction?  On purpose? :D

Gotta love it!

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Druscylla on 2009 May 29, 18:42:13


This is an outdated rule and something that can be used occasionally for effect. I would question your comma use in that sentence, bee tee double u.

What next, arguing that we should adopt the new spelling of "cooky?"

I had always thought it was spelled "kooky". Though now I crave a cookie.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 May 29, 18:44:29
And it's not like our modus operandi is not well known around Sims forums.  Why n00bs come to MATY and feel that somehow the MATY culture just doesn't apply to them, because they're so speshul, is beyond my comprehension.

Yet, most of us know using a conjunction to start a sentence is bad form in proper English and grammar. Conjunctions are used to connect words not start sentences.

Very well, have it your way.  Corrected.  Now you'll likely point out that this post does not include complete sentences.  There is some license to use conversational speech constructions, lolcat speak, and other "non-standard" forms of phrasing.  You have to know when this is appropriate in the given cultural context.  Similarly, you might want to consider the appropriateness of strangers coming into your house to criticise your table manners.

I have, this time, picked up my fork in "deference" (and I use the word advisedly) to your sensibilities.  Pray don't make me use it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MickeyJR on 2009 May 29, 18:51:28
Yet, most of us know using a conjunction to start a sentence is bad form in proper English and grammar.

This is an outdated rule and something that can be used occasionally for effect. I would question your comma use in that sentence, bee tee double u.

What next, arguing that we should adopt the new spelling of "cooky?"

Did someone miss that mickeyjr started that sentence with a conjunction?  On purpose? :D

Gotta love it!

Hook


LOL, yes I did. Talk about noobism. I should have started it with however or something like that. I wasn't paying attention and it bit me in the ass.

P&L at me. Teach me for correcting someone. I think I'll go LURK MOAR.
And it's not like our modus operandi is not well known around Sims forums.  Why n00bs come to MATY and feel that somehow the MATY culture just doesn't apply to them, because they're so speshul, is beyond my comprehension.

Yet, most of us know using a conjunction to start a sentence is bad form in proper English and grammar. Conjunctions are used to connect words not start sentences.

Very well, have it your way.  Corrected.  Now you'll likely point out that this post does not include complete sentences.  There is some license to use conversational speech constructions, lolcat speak, and other "non-standard" forms of phrasing.  You have to know when this is appropriate in the given cultural context.  Similarly, you might want to consider the appropriateness of strangers coming into your house to criticise your table manners.

I have, this time, picked up my fork in "deference" (and I use the word advisedly) to your sensibilities.  Pray don't make me use it.

No, I screwed up using "Yet". I will pay for it I'm sure.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: phyllis_p on 2009 May 29, 18:53:46
/me thinks mickeyjr is campaigning for the Ms. Sheeple contest.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MickeyJR on 2009 May 29, 18:57:24
/me thinks mickeyjr is campaigning for the Ms. Sheeple contest.

No, I would have to do far more to even be in that running.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 18:58:53
/me thinks mickeyjr is campaigning for the Ms. Sheeple contest.

Campaigning is dangerous, based on precedent, since it may bite you in the ass. On the other hand, bribery is always a good strategery.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 19:00:46
Did someone miss that mickeyjr started that sentence with a conjunction?  On purpose? :D

LOL, yes I did. Talk about noobism. I should have started it with however or something like that. I wasn't paying attention and it bit me in the ass.

Aw, man... I figured you did it intentionally.  You should have taken the ball and run with it.  Still, no one seems to have noticed, or they'd have given you shit for it.

Hook

Edited twice to fix my leet quoting skills.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 29, 19:02:16
Did someone miss that mickeyjr started that sentence with a conjunction?  On purpose? :D

LOL, yes I did. Talk about noobism. I should have started it with however or something like that. I wasn't paying attention and it bit me in the ass.

Aw, man... I figured you did it intentionally.  You should have taken the ball and run with it.  Still, no one seems to have noticed, or they'd have given you shit for it.

Hook


And here I was assuming that it was a fuck up. Nice try, though, Hook.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 19:06:42
And here I was assuming that it was a fuck up. Nice try, though, Hook.

It turns out it WAS a fuck up, and a glorious one at that.  Complaining about starting a sentence with a conjunction while starting that very same complaint with a conjunction.  How good does it get? I mean, NO one fucks up THAT badly. :D

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 May 29, 19:08:31
I'm finding it incredibly ironic that it either refuses to capitalize the 'I', or leaves it out of the sentence altogether, but is so obviously full of self importance.
Why this aversion to giving the personal pronoun it's proper due, while insisting on special treatment for itself?

What manner of psychosis is this? Someone with learnings of psychology please explain.

I really wish you didn't ask, because now I have to muse over it.

According to handwriting analysis, the ‘I' is in relation to the parental influence. It is the height of the upper letters that foretell of someone's level of self-importance.

For instance, a written capital ‘I' that is closed on the top, suggests a person that is maternally influenced; if closed at the bottom, the influence is fraternal  paternal - closed at both ends or not closed at all should be apparent at this point, and a straight ‘I' in handwriting is a sign of an orphan or someone who feels no connection to their parents.

Perhaps the refusal to capitalize one's ‘I' in type has something to do with defiance against one's parents, and a need to prove and enforce upon one's own individuality, which almost seems to be the case here.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 19:14:34
Hm, sounds like numerology to me.  I assume you mean "paternal" rather than "fraternal"... that one confused me a bit at first.

Perhaps you can supply pics of said differences.  I can't visualize them from your descriptions.

Hook


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: phyllis_p on 2009 May 29, 19:16:25
/me thinks mickeyjr is campaigning for the Ms. Sheeple contest.

No, I would have to do far more to even be in that running.

You do know you've been nominated, yes?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MickeyJR on 2009 May 29, 19:22:43
/me thinks mickeyjr is campaigning for the Ms. Sheeple contest.

No, I would have to do far more to even be in that running.

You do know you've been nominated, yes?
Yes. However, my noobism hasn't been on the scale of some of the other noobs. I might put my foot in my mouth, as above, but I know when to own up and shut up. My last thread taught me that. Think it is time for me to go back into LURK MOAR mode for a while.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 May 29, 19:26:56
Hm, sounds like numerology to me.  I assume you mean "paternal" rather than "fraternal"... that one confused me a bit at first.

Perhaps you can supply pics of said differences.  I can't visualize them from your descriptions.

Hook

Psst. Hook. We know who you are, your lecherness. You don't need to sign your posts. Ta ta now.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 May 29, 19:29:28
Hm, sounds like numerology to me.  I assume you mean "paternal" rather than "fraternal"... that one confused me a bit at first.

Perhaps you can supply pics of said differences.  I can't visualize them from your descriptions.

Hook


My bad. Corrected, and thanks.

Is this what you meant?

(http://www.m4hire.com/misc/new-1.jpg)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Soggy Fox on 2009 May 29, 19:30:00
*laughs* I suppose it could, if not for the fact that its watermelon on the avatar's head, not a kumquat at all.  The point I was attempting to make to the now banished annoyance was that there is -no- excuse for glaring spelling and punctuation marks.  Even being dyslexic isn't an excuse.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Frankenbeasley on 2009 May 29, 19:37:59
Psst. Hook. We know who you are, your lecherness. You don't need to sign your posts. Ta ta now.

I'm reasonably sure that the Hookster is aware that signing his posts is not obligatory. I am, furthermore, pretty much certain that he chooses to sign his posts. I am also confident that Hook is grown up enough for you to be explicit with your comments. If you want to say: "Hook, stop signing your posts!" then simply say it. This coy, sly obfuscation is beneath you and, might I add, disrespectful given the years of e-lechery that have been so selflessly provided by the esteemed former Senator.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zaphod Beeblebrox on 2009 May 29, 19:44:09
Ah, this is why even though I've been in the Simming communities since the dawning of Sim time, I rarely post unless there's something important to say (or something random, as this shit-thread obviously dictates) because who wants to look like a tard on the internets?  Only a...well, tard.

One should always associate one's self with a forum's etiquette before becoming a full-fledged member in order to look a little less like a speshul snowflake.  It's also known as LURK MOAR as has been pointed out, time and time again!

(I used to be an administrator on several forums and am an insane Grammar Nazi according to my speshul husband.)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Aner-Dyfan on 2009 May 29, 19:46:24
I would like to refer everyone of the original post. The following quote in particular:

Quote
Pescado has strongly suggested that grammatical errors and other behaviour demanding the sharp spork be handled by a barrage of PMs, rather than excessive poking in the thread

I would have posted this earlier yet was afk, so I think all of you should be feeling bad about yourselves in the handling of the new can. It was meant to be handled via PM not sporks in thread, shame on you all.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Rhayden on 2009 May 29, 19:48:10
Psst. Hook. We know who you are, your lecherness. You don't need to sign your posts. Ta ta now.

I'm reasonably sure that the Hookster is aware that signing his posts is not obligatory. I am, furthermore, pretty much certain that he chooses to sign his posts. I am also confident that Hook is grown up enough for you to be explicit with your comments. If you want to say: "Hook, stop signing your posts!" then simply say it. This coy, sly obfuscation is beneath you and, might I add, disrespectful given the years of e-lechery that have been so selflessly provided by the esteemed former Senator.

[14:23] <Rhayden> Hey Hook.
[14:23] <Hook> Hey Rhayden :)
[14:23] <Rhayden> Do me a favor and stop signing your posts like a fucking 12-year-old girl.

Like this?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Hook on 2009 May 29, 20:05:22
Is this what you meant?

Exactly.  Thanks.  Do people actually do that?

Hook (who has been signing his online posts since before most of you were born)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 May 29, 20:06:34
Rhayden, I thought about that, but that shows actual annoyance. I'm not that annoyed. Hence, I was intentionally coy. Good to know that translated well.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: phyllis_p on 2009 May 29, 20:13:15
I would like to refer everyone of the original post. The following quote in particular:

Quote
Pescado has strongly suggested that grammatical errors and other behaviour demanding the sharp spork be handled by a barrage of PMs, rather than excessive poking in the thread

I would have posted this earlier yet was afk, so I think all of you should be feeling bad about yourselves in the handling of the new can. It was meant to be handled via PM not sporks in thread, shame on you all.

I thought about that, but I thought maybe he was referring only to threads where the subject was not some sort of ass-hattery or related tardism.  Still, I've sent two PM sporks, and received utterly no reply.  How unsatisfying.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 May 29, 20:32:40
(http://www.m4hire.com/misc/new-1.jpg)

What does it say about me if I always write I in print, even when the rest of my writing is (mostly) in cursive?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 May 29, 20:34:01
Is this what you meant?

Exactly.  Thanks.  Do people actually do that?

Hook (who has been signing his online posts since before most of you were born)


Write like that? Yes.
Or perform Handwriting analysis? Also, yes - great party perk.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 20:35:07
Ah, this is why even though I've been in the Simming communities since the dawning of Sim time, I rarely post unless there's something important to say (or something random, as this shit-thread obviously dictates) because who wants to look like a tard on the internets?  Only a...well, tard.

One should always associate one's self with a forum's etiquette before becoming a full-fledged member in order to look a little less like a speshul snowflake.  It's also known as LURK MOAR as has been pointed out, time and time again!

(I used to be an administrator on several forums and am an insane Grammar Nazi according to my speshul husband.)

Dude, you can't even spell your username. Insane, possibly. Grammar anything, I think not.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: snowbawl on 2009 May 29, 20:36:00
(http://www.m4hire.com/misc/new-1.jpg)

What does it say about me if I always write I in print, even when the rest of my writing is (mostly) in cursive?

It says that you are a cock-headed fucknut that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CharleeRose on 2009 May 29, 20:37:17
(http://www.m4hire.com/misc/new-1.jpg)

What does it say about me if I always write I in print, even when the rest of my writing is (mostly) in cursive?

That you fail at writing in cursive.  ;)

Damn! Both beaten and outdone by a non-n00b.  I have much to learn, it seems.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 May 29, 21:56:09
I write in a mesh of cursive and print. My "I" is always in print. I are fucknut, too?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 May 29, 22:09:28
What does it say about me if I always write I in print, even when the rest of my writing is (mostly) in cursive?

To be taken with a grain of salt:

It depends. If a person writes with an open ‘I', without being crossed at the top or bottom, they have an orphaned attitude about themselves - as already stated. They possibly didn't spend much time with their parents, or they had to physically raise themselves, or felt like they did - depending on the situation. This creates an individual that isn't influenced by either parent since neither parent made much of an impact.

If it's a closed ‘I', that is both crossed at the top and bottom, I believe it hints at resentment or enforcement in regards to a person's parent(s), or possibly a feeling of being overburdened/cut off by one or both of them depending on where the stronger cross is. If I recall correctly, the general rule is to just imagine both the maternal and/or paternal influence cutting off the individual and stopping them from going in either direction. (i.e.: Dad wants son to be a doctor; son wants to be a video game designer = loss of opportunity is met with resentment)

It's been a while since I studied all of this (back in the early nineties and mostly out of curiosity) so, I may be a little rusty, and of course, the rest of the handwriting helps to paint a better picture and can give a better hint at what is going on.

None of this is gospel though - I just find it interesting because it's fun.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 May 29, 22:20:30
Sounds a bit like those games where you add up all the letters from your name and your crush's name to find out if it's TWU WUV to me.  What if my entire handwriting style is heavily influenced by the fact that I apparently never learned correct penmanship, and writing for more than about ten seconds at a time causes horrible pain in my wrist which inevitably turns any further writing into a wibbly unintelligible mess?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Simchick on 2009 May 29, 22:29:03
I know I'm going to get my ass kicked but I could not resist. Nine pages of totally irrelevant shit. And I read (past tense) every last page because this site cracks me up.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 May 29, 22:30:04
Then the analysis of your handwriting would be incorrect.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 May 29, 22:32:05
Grammar is never irrelevant on MATY.

Gelatinous - how would you come up with a "true" analysis of my handwriting, then?  What innate properties about me, besides the dexterity of my hands and the way I was taught to write English, have anything to do with how my handwriting turns out?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 29, 22:34:49
I know I'm going to get my ass kicked but I could not resist. Nine pages of totally irrelevant shit. And I read (past tense) every last page because this site cracks me up.

What is this meant to do? Make us feel sorry for you because you have poor impulse control?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: snowbawl on 2009 May 29, 22:41:20
At least you found a point.  I was not so lucky.  I am still scratching my head like a cock-notched fucknut wondering what Simchicks are talking about and, perhaps more importantly, why.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Crabcat on 2009 May 29, 22:43:45
I'm finding it incredibly ironic that it either refuses to capitalize the 'I', or leaves it out of the sentence altogether, but is so obviously full of self importance.
Why this aversion to giving the personal pronoun it's proper due, while insisting on special treatment for itself?

What manner of psychosis is this? Someone with learnings of psychology please explain.

Failing to capitalize "I" shows a diminishing of self. In this case, the insistent use of the uncapitalized pronoun plus the poster's extreme defensive posture point to a serious inferiority complex. Poor baby doesn't like herself very much, but deeply resents that anyone would point that out. I'd guess she needs some couch time.

I'll now resume teh lurk.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 May 29, 22:45:12
I know I'm going to get my ass kicked but I could not resist. Nine pages of totally irrelevant shit. And I read (past tense) every last page because this site cracks me up.

There's no need to signpost your tense. We are not illiterate. Unless that's meant to be a joke, in which case it majorly fails. Here's a question for the floor: if you know that what you're going to say is stupid and pointless, why on earth would you bother to post it?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CharleeRose on 2009 May 29, 22:52:02
Here's a question for the floor: if you know that what you're going to say is stupid and pointless, why on earth would you bother to post it?

Rohina already answered that for us with "lack of impulse control."


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Simchick on 2009 May 29, 23:04:44
I know I'm going to get my ass kicked but I could not resist. Nine pages of totally irrelevant shit. And I read (past tense) every last page because this site cracks me up.

What is this meant to do? Make us feel sorry for you because you have poor impulse control?

Maybe a nod to your lack of impulse control? Why don't you just ignore me? I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 May 29, 23:16:09
Grammar is never irrelevant on MATY.

Gelatinous - how would you come up with a "true" analysis of my handwriting, then?  What innate properties about me, besides the dexterity of my hands and the way I was taught to write English, have anything to do with how my handwriting turns out?

Supposedly, there are subconscious aspects at play.

With disabilities in mind, these aspects of a person's handwriting should remain fairly consistent:

The tilt (left/right) suggests how introverted/extroverted a person is. If it goes in both directions during a sentence, mood swings and flightiness are apparent.

The height of the upper stems of letters like ‘h', ‘l', ‘b' suggest how far a person is willing to strive for knowledge. The width of those upper stems suggests how inflated their ego is.

‘t' and ‘d' are a bit different though; their height reveals individuality. If the stems are short, the person is more of their own individual.

The heaviness of the cross to a ‘t' shows how much staying power a person has (will they follow through? How much effort will they put into it? Do they do it with flair?).

The reach of the lower stems (‘y', ‘g', ‘p') suggest how much of a root that person has and how much emphasis they put on family and friends. Fat curves that close show a person that hangs onto their friends and family more than someone that drops their letters off in a straight line, etc… etc…

Heaviness of print up to the type of pen a person chooses to use (fine or bold) all tell a little bit of something about a person, as well as how close the letters in a word are in comparison to actual word spacing and the base-line direction.

Also, they say that people that break between printing and writing within a word or sentence tend to be more intuitive than someone who doesn't - the more broken the word is toward print, the more intuitive.

And like Hook said earlier, it does sound very much like numerology, doesn't it?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: linz on 2009 May 29, 23:32:48


 I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?

I second this. I recently wrote a research paper on "Internet Socializing" and "Online Communities" and NOT to my surprise the findings indicated that over 30% of the users in these communities seem to develop a second persona, which is usually close to the opposite or the exact opposite of their true personality of the outside world.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: reggikko on 2009 May 29, 23:46:13


 I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?

I second this. I recently wrote a research paper on "Internet Socializing" and "Online Communities" and NOT to my surprise the findings indicated that over 30% of the users in these communities seem to develop a second persona, which is usually close to the opposite or the exact opposite of their true personality of the outside world.

We're actually much meaner in real life. We try to curb our behavior here, give people the benefit of the doubt, yadda, yadda. Always remember, we don't know you; we probably don't like you. Our responses to your drivel will likely reflect these feelings. If you can show yourselves to be made of stern stuff, can take some sporking and come back with a pithy retort, you might be accepted here. Otherwise, GTFO. Thanks.

Oh, and, generally speaking to all that is MATY noobdom, stop with the "Pes" already. He REALLY doesn't know you and he likes you even less than the rest of us do. He's not your BFF, FFS.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 May 29, 23:49:41
And like Hook said earlier, it does sound very much like numerology, doesn't it?

...or astrology. I learned cursive early, on my own. It was only in fifth grade that I decided to relearn how to print. I've always blamed that for the way I switch between the two, definitely mid-word. There are definite patterns I can see to it, but it's nothing I try to do. An 's' at the end of a word is in print, mid-word it's cursive. I hate cursive 'x', so that's always print. The same with 'Q'. Who came up with that, anyways? How is a 2 a Q?

My 'I' has top and bottom bars, and I get along just fine with my parents. I just spoke to both today. Mom's hooking me up with some networking contacts, and Dad's all excited about some stupid Nascar Race and their anniversary tomorrow.



 I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?

I second this. I recently wrote a research paper on "Internet Socializing" and "Online Communities" and NOT to my surprise the findings indicated that over 30% of the users in these communities seem to develop a second persona, which is usually close to the opposite or the exact opposite of their true personality of the outside world.
In real life, I say "Yay" about pretty much everything. That would not be appreciated here. But other than that, yes, I'm pretty much the same.  Perhaps more profane.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: lemmiwinks on 2009 May 29, 23:50:54
Maybe a nod to your lack of impulse control? Why don't you just ignore me? I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?

Do people become spineless illiterate sheep when they log onto the BBS or N99?
Should I log on there and rant about how nice they are being makes me want to puke? Will they just "ignore me"?
I am sure that would be frowned upon, as you coming here and spouting off about our culture is.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 May 29, 23:56:05
I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?
I second this. I recently wrote a research paper on "Internet Socializing" and "Online Communities" and NOT to my surprise the findings indicated that over 30% of the users in these communities seem to develop a second persona, which is usually close to the opposite or the exact opposite of their true personality of the outside world.

Fakers or liars. I'm pretty much the same in RL. I don't see the problem that you noobs are shouting about. If you came into my real home and started acting like an asshat (and YES, not adhering to the rules is being an asshat), I'd tell you so and then promptly give you a swift kick in the behind out my door.

No, I believe it. It is a lot easier to say things online that you wouldn't say in real life. However, if 30% of the users are the opposite of how they appear to be online then 70% of them are exactly what they seem to be. That means that the majority of us here at MATY are just as likely to make people cry in real life as we are here.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: vagabondher on 2009 May 30, 00:03:08
I'm trying to understand how a post about something as simple as grammar has gotten ten pages worth of replies. Why is it such a difficult task for people to type correctly? If we knew the meaning, would that unlock the secrets of the universe, perhaps?  ???


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Frankenbeasley on 2009 May 30, 00:04:08
However, if 30% of the users are the opposite of how they appear to be online then 70% of them are exactly what they seem to be. That means that the majority of us here at MATY are just as likely to make people cry in real life as we are here.

It also means that 7 out of 10 of the sheep really are illiterate, retarded 12s in real life, whilst the remaining 3 are educated, intelligent, mature adults who choose to act as though they are brattish, egotistical children. If anything I hate the latter more than the former.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 May 30, 00:25:57
And like Hook said earlier, it does sound very much like numerology, doesn't it?

...or astrology. I learned cursive early, on my own. It was only in fifth grade that I decided to relearn how to print. I've always blamed that for the way I switch between the two, definitely mid-word. There are definite patterns I can see to it, but it's nothing I try to do. An 's' at the end of a word is in print, mid-word it's cursive. I hate cursive 'x', so that's always print. The same with 'Q'. Who came up with that, anyways? How is a 2 a Q?

My 'I' has top and bottom bars, and I get along just fine with my parents. I just spoke to both today. Mom's hooking me up with some networking contacts, and Dad's all excited about some stupid Nascar Race and their anniversary tomorrow.


It sounds like your writing is similar to mine - I can't write for dren.

I could also be wrong about the closed 'I'. Like I said, it was some time ago that I had an interest in all of this, and for some weird reason, I can remember quite a bit of it - perhaps I use it on a subconscious level - but not all of it.

Now I have this sudden urge to dig up my books and check to see if I was even remotely close about that closed ‘I'.

Not tonight though, I promised my daughter I'd take her to the cabin for the weekend.



 I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?

I second this. I recently wrote a research paper on "Internet Socializing" and "Online Communities" and NOT to my surprise the findings indicated that over 30% of the users in these communities seem to develop a second persona, which is usually close to the opposite or the exact opposite of their true personality of the outside world.

I don't really see why any of that matters.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 30, 01:26:33


 I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?

I second this. I recently wrote a research paper on "Internet Socializing" and "Online Communities" and NOT to my surprise the findings indicated that over 30% of the users in these communities seem to develop a second persona, which is usually close to the opposite or the exact opposite of their true personality of the outside world.

The difference between AFK and MATY is that AFK I get PAID to act like this.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MuertoElBarto on 2009 May 30, 02:55:25


The difference between AFK and MATY is that at AFK I get PAID to act like this.

Fixed.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DJKID on 2009 May 30, 03:02:01
No, she had it right.

The difference between away from keyboard and More Awesome Than You is that away from keyboard I get PAID to act like this.

Away from keyboard is not a place you are at, it is a verb.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: lemmiwinks on 2009 May 30, 03:03:25


The difference between AFK and MATY is that at AFK I get PAID to act like this.

Fixed.

Not being a grammar cop, I still think rohina's version looks moar correct.

Edit. Ninja'd by a n00b.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MuertoElBarto on 2009 May 30, 03:07:29
No, she had it right.

The difference between away from keyboard and More Awesome Than You is that away from keyboard I get PAID to act like this.

Away from keyboard is not a place you are at, it is a verb.
D'oh!  Not knowing what 'AFK' was, and assuming it was the anagram of her workplace, I put my foot in it.  Mea culpa.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dstucki on 2009 May 30, 03:24:46
I'm finding it incredibly ironic that it either refuses to capitalize the 'I', or leaves it out of the sentence altogether, but is so obviously full of self importance.
Why this aversion to giving the personal pronoun it's proper due, while insisting on special treatment for itself?



There's no apostrophe when using the possessive form of the word "it".


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 May 30, 03:43:43


 I'm curious; Do you all act like this in real life or is there some transformation when you log onto MATY?

I second this. I recently wrote a research paper on "Internet Socializing" and "Online Communities" and NOT to my surprise the findings indicated that over 30% of the users in these communities seem to develop a second persona, which is usually close to the opposite or the exact opposite of their true personality of the outside world.

We're actually much meaner in real life. We try to curb our behavior here, give people the benefit of the doubt, yadda, yadda. Always remember, we don't know you; we probably don't like you. Our responses to your drivel will likely reflect these feelings. If you can show yourselves to be made of stern stuff, can take some sporking and come back with a pithy retort, you might be accepted here. Otherwise, GTFO. Thanks.

Oh, and, generally speaking to all that is MATY noobdom, stop with the "Pes" already. He REALLY doesn't know you and he likes you even less than the rest of us do. He's not your BFF, FFS.


I personally think many of the problems IRL stem from over use of a false sense of politeness and consideration.  I find the uninhibited blunt forthrightness of MATY refreshing and believe strongly that more MATY-like behaviour IRL is eminently worthwhile.  A stupid stranger IRL deserves no more of my consideration, and is of no more consequence to me than a stupid n00b on MATY.  I am, consequently, quite like my MATY persona IRL.  N00bs can rest comfortably knowing that if I call you a fuckwit here, I would likely call you a fuckwit IRL.  Does that help?  I personally find it reassuring.

Also, BFFs are for 12s, and 12s are surplus to MATY requirements.  GET OFF OUR LAWN!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 30, 03:55:43
However, if 30% of the users are the opposite of how they appear to be online then 70% of them are exactly what they seem to be. That means that the majority of us here at MATY are just as likely to make people cry in real life as we are here.

It also means that 7 out of 10 of the sheep really are illiterate, retarded 12s in real life, whilst the remaining 3 are educated, intelligent, mature adults who choose to act as though they are brattish, egotistical children. If anything I hate the latter more than the former.

……………./´¯/)
……………/…./
…………../…./
……../´¯/'..'/´¯¯`·¸
…../'/../…./……./¨¯\
…('(…………. ¯~/'..')
….\…………….'…../
…..'\'……………_.·´
…….\…………..(
……..\…………..\


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 May 30, 05:23:54
When I see stupid n00bly posts from SimplyConstipated like this:

Oh gosh, i used wiggles to emphasize my name, that MUST mean i'm a pleb. And my attitude? It's a good one to have, i'm proud of it...

~Jenni~

They wind up sounding like this:

Oh gosh, i BAAWWW a lot
(http://phorum.mustnotbenamed.com/icons/butthurt.jpg)

And my attitude? I CAN HAZ BAAAAAWWWWtism!
(http://phorum.mustnotbenamed.com/icons/butthurt.jpg)

LOL WUT? "Tilde"? WUT IZ DAT LOL
(http://phorum.mustnotbenamed.com/icons/butthurt.jpg)

'I' am going to go to great lengths not to fit in or read the FAQ LOL
(http://phorum.mustnotbenamed.com/icons/butthurt.jpg)

LOL i took a dump on your rug
(http://phorum.mustnotbenamed.com/icons/butthurt.jpg)

BAAAWWWW i am too speshul and important to use proper capitalization, spelling or grammar
(http://phorum.mustnotbenamed.com/icons/butthurt.jpg)

BAAAWWWW u guiz r SO MEEEEN
(http://phorum.mustnotbenamed.com/icons/butthurt.jpg)

BAA BAA BAA MATY should behave in the way i think is best
(http://phorum.mustnotbenamed.com/icons/butthurt.jpg)

wiggles (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gB4MNu6W9sg) Jenni wiggles (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FV6nJxg7mM0)

This particular sheeple is giving JonaFootbullets a run for its money.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LurkieMoar on 2009 May 30, 08:15:05

One should always associate one's self with a forum's etiquette before becoming a full-fledged member in order to look a little less like a speshul snowflake.  It's also known as LURK MOAR as has been pointed out, time and time again!

As someone else who has been in the Simming communities since the dawning of Sim time, I am often amazed at how many people do plunge straight in without lurking for a while.

Hook (who has been signing his online posts since before most of you were born)

Ah, those were the days.  Usenet, that's where we used to hang out before all these modern web-based forums sprouted and yes, we signed our online posts ;  it's not a 12-year-old foible at all.





Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 30, 09:01:08
Awwww...my first boob noob sporked to cannage. *wipes away a tear of pride* If only mamma could see me now!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: msalwaysright on 2009 May 30, 13:46:46
I'm finding it incredibly ironic that it either refuses to capitalize the 'I', or leaves it out of the sentence altogether, but is so obviously full of self importance.
Why this aversion to giving the personal pronoun its proper due, while insisting on special treatment for itself?



There's no apostrophe when using the possessive form of the word "it".

Yeah, um, good eye, there. I like to, yeah, um, intentionally throw in obvious mistakes just to see who catches them. Yeah, that's the ticket...



Dammit!!!



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 May 30, 14:30:39
Awwww...my first boob noob sporked to cannage. *wipes away a tear of pride* If only mamma could see me now!

Watch out, you will be hooked now.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: ThyGuy on 2009 May 30, 16:10:24
I have dyslexia. I don't post often because I am not awesome. All who are not awesome should follow my advice.

Lurk MOAR.
STFU.
J.M. has a pack of wild boars, ready to climb right up your ass. All will celebrate as they violate you in ways that cannot be imagined by those who haven't experienced it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: reggikko on 2009 May 30, 16:16:00
From ThyGuy's signature:

Quote
Do us a favor? DIE, GO TO HEAVEN, STFU!

I am so using this in the future. Also, good advice. Why is it that only the smart ones actually take this advice though? It's one of those vicious circle thingies. The ones smart enough to do what ThyGuy advises would probably be just fine on the forum. The ones who need to take the advice never do. Le Sigh.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Druscylla on 2009 May 30, 16:23:48
<snip>

Also, stop abusing your poor language. What has it ever done to you?

Stop the language abuse. For just minutes a day, you too can end the cycle of abuse. Millions of literate adults will stop sporking you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zaphod Beeblebrox on 2009 May 30, 17:40:49
Dude, you can't even spell your username. Insane, possibly. Grammar anything, I think not.

Ah, that.  My hands type slower than my mind can think, sometimes, so I end up looking stupid, and such was the case when I made this account years ago.  I didn't make another account to fix the mistake because that's generally a big no-no and seen as trolling on other sites, so I decided to just stick with it and let people point and laugh. 

Of course, I hang out on 4chan regularly, so perhaps the stupidity is rubbing onto me somewhat.  Uh oh.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 May 30, 17:52:56
I didn't make another account to fix the mistake because that's generally a big no-no and seen as trolling on other sites, so I decided to just stick with it and let people point and laugh.

You don't need to; just go in your profile and modify it. You username (the one with which you login) remains the same, but you can modify the visible one, i.e. the one which is displayed.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zaphod Beeblebrox on 2009 May 30, 18:09:40
Oh, for Christ's sake.  I wish I'd known that long ago.  Didn't realize this board had that function.  Thank you so much for that tidbit of knowledge!   I decided to shorten it as well since it's rather long.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: lemmiwinks on 2009 May 30, 18:24:12
An example of an ESL that not only does not have to worry about the Grammar Cops, but has a better grasp of English than many of our regulars.

Normally I lurk a lot, read a lot, and try not to post a lot, as english is my secondary language, and I am scared of the grammar police. But, I have a question and I am hankering for an answer, so here goes:

Do anyone know what fertilization of the plants you can grow actually do? As I understand it, quality is based on what you plant, (The seed's quality +1 = the plant's quality) and thus fertilization with rare fish or plants, means nothing. So I am wondering if anyone have found a secret about it that I am missing.

*Runs for cover again.*


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zaphod Beeblebrox on 2009 May 30, 18:45:02
I know plenty of ESLs on other forums, and you wouldn't know they are foreign if they didn't say so.  I remember an Argentian friend talking about how difficult it is to decipher a post full of "ur, 4 shurs, and !!!!!111!!!" when English isn't his mother tongue.  Of course, those of us who were sick of the 12s with whom we were being bombarded on a daily basis (tl;dr:  this was because another friend ran a website that was dedicated to an animated show, but the forum was supposed to be strictly 18+) told him that we were sincerely grateful for the effort that he and the other foreign fans put into making their posts legible, and we wished that our own American youth could be bothered to do so.

It's sad, really.  I noticed that my son's teachers don't bother to correct his spelling or grammar on most of his assignments because it's "the substance that matters" to them.  Apparently, AOLspeak is changing the way papers are graded.  Why in the hell has it become commonplace?   


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Salomon on 2009 May 30, 19:09:45
What mostly surprises me is the amount of attention that people with bad grammar get, I figure that in the future, if I want to get attention, all I need to do is to use bad/worse grammar and presto, pages and pages dedicated to me. It sounds cheap.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: cyperangel on 2009 May 30, 19:11:24
An example of an ESL that not only does not have to worry about the Grammar Cops, but has a better grasp of English than many of our regulars.

Normally I lurk a lot, read a lot, and try not to post a lot, as english is my secondary language, and I am scared of the grammar police. But, I have a question and I am hankering for an answer, so here goes:

Do anyone know what fertilization of the plants you can grow actually do? As I understand it, quality is based on what you plant, (The seed's quality +1 = the plant's quality) and thus fertilization with rare fish or plants, means nothing. So I am wondering if anyone have found a secret about it that I am missing.

*Runs for cover again.*

*Delurks*

I am... Both flattered, and afraid that I will now be in the searchlight of the GP. At least I now know that someone bothered to read my post, although an answer to my question is still nowhere to be found. Thank you for the comment lemmiwinks, it means a lot to me.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Ingesoc on 2009 May 30, 19:31:30

*Delurks*

I am... Both flattered, and afraid that I will now be in the searchlight of the GP. At least I now know that someone bothered to read my post, although an answer to my question is still nowhere to be found. Thank you for the comment lemmiwinks, it means a lot to me.

The Grammar Police have made it quite clear that they target abuse by people who should know better.
A person using ESL poorly, but making an effort to do so correctly, is not considered a target. In some cases I have seen them help struggling ESLs solve language problems.
Native speakers who use English stupidly are the ones who should be afraid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 May 30, 20:00:11
Don't worry; I'm the worst ESL around here - I envy Annan and kiki's grasp of the language, for example - but still I haven't been scolded once. And I know that my English syntax and phrase construction is far from correct; I have improved during the years here, but I'm sure that many native English speakers here shiver quite often when they read my posts.
I try to return their niceness by doing the best I can. Yes, surprise: MATYans are fair and nice when it comes to people who are civil, act like adults and are not arrogant. ;)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 30, 21:36:45
The Grammar Police have made it quite clear that they target abuse by people who should know better.
A person using ESL poorly, but making an effort to do so correctly, is not considered a target. In some cases I have seen them help struggling ESLs solve language problems.
Native speakers who use English stupidly are the ones who should be afraid.

It is also possible to be so stubbornly ungrammatical that you get an exemption in the form of Teflon or lifetime Teflon. Examples:  morriganrant, Tigerlilley and Bangelnuts.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 May 30, 23:03:30
Double-posting with an important announcement.

I have PROOF that Pescado's Patented PM Method for Noob-Discouragement works. Look at this:

I hope it helps :). I'm leaving here, though, the snotty private messages are more than I like it a forum.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 May 30, 23:16:22
Don't worry; I'm the worst ESL around here - I envy Annan and kiki's grasp of the language, for example - but still I haven't been scolded once. And I know that my English syntax and phrase construction is far from correct; I have improved during the years here, but I'm sure that many native English speakers here shiver quite often when they read my posts.
I try to return their niceness by doing the best I can. Yes, surprise: MATYans are fair and nice when it comes to people who are civil, act like adults and are not arrogant. ;)

Give yourself a bit MOAR credit - I didn't realise at first that you were an ESL too, you very rarely slip up and if you do it generally just looks like a typo that anyone could make.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MaryH on 2009 May 30, 23:17:33
Overcome with PM's? Hell, we all ought to try it. Might shorten the stay of the other lurkers with bad grammar skills.

Although I'll miss the flame-throwing. Have to have some excitement in my life.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 02, 19:30:04
It's sad, really.  I noticed that my son's teachers don't bother to correct his spelling or grammar on most of his assignments because it's "the substance that matters" to them.  Apparently, AOLspeak is changing the way papers are graded.  Why in the hell has it become commonplace?   

This probably also has something to do with overly PC public school teachers nowadays that are afraid to correct kids, fearing the wrath of child-centered parents.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: redwards on 2009 June 03, 00:15:44
Just for fun:

Grammar and language rules that go above and beyond your everyday policing: http://www.economist.com/research/styleGuide/index.cfm?page=673903

Some of the stuff in there is pretty obvious, but some of it is amusing and fun. A lot of their rules won't necessarily be agreed upon by your modern dictionary. Of course, your 2009 dictionary probably has words like 'webinar,' 'woot,' and 'fanboy' in it.

Examples:
Quote
Epicentre means that point on the earth's surface above the centre of an earthquake. To say that Mr Putin was at the epicentre of the dispute suggests that the argument took place underground.

Testament is a will, testimony evidence. It is testimony to the poor teaching of English that journalists habitually write testament instead.

Circumstances stand around a thing, so it is in, not under, them.

Effectively means with effect; if you mean in effect, say it.The matter was effectively dealt with on Friday means it was done well on Friday. The matter was, in effect, dealt with on Friday means it was more or less attended to on Friday. Effectively leaderless would do as a description of the demonstrators in East Germany in 1989 but not those in Tiananmen Square. The devaluation of the Slovak currency in 1993, described by some as an effective 8%, turned out to be a rather ineffective 8%.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 03, 01:35:09
These are not grammar rules, they are explanations about vocabulary and usage, and some of them are contentious at best.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: lemmiwinks on 2009 June 03, 01:37:59
After spell checking your post, prior to hitting the Post button, may I suggest running it through the Stupid Filter (http://stupidfilter.org/demo.php)?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 03, 01:46:53
I was a mod on Stupid Filter for a while, but I quit when I realized most of the modding was aimed at a much lower bar of stupid than I was looking for.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: iHateyou on 2009 June 03, 01:52:33
It's sad, really.  I noticed that my son's teachers don't bother to correct his spelling or grammar on most of his assignments because it's "the substance that matters" to them.  Apparently, AOLspeak is changing the way papers are graded.  Why in the hell has it become commonplace?   

This probably also has something to do with overly PC public school teachers nowadays that are afraid to correct kids, fearing the wrath of child-centered parents.

Actually it probably has more to do with the fact that your kid's classes probably have 38+ students in each class. When you teach at least 200 students a day you cannot correct everything on each assignment. Next year in our district the classes are going up to 42. We save that kind of grading for the big important writing assignments and give everything else a few "pity points" for effort.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 03, 02:07:17
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MuertoElBarto on 2009 June 03, 02:10:05
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?

Not an educator here, but that was my interpretation.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 June 03, 02:29:59
It's sad, really.  I noticed that my son's teachers don't bother to correct his spelling or grammar on most of his assignments because it's "the substance that matters" to them.  Apparently, AOLspeak is changing the way papers are graded.  Why in the hell has it become commonplace?   

This probably also has something to do with overly PC public school teachers nowadays that are afraid to correct kids, fearing the wrath of child-centered parents.

Actually it probably has more to do with the fact that your kid's classes probably have 38+ students in each class. When you teach at least 200 students a day you cannot correct everything on each assignment. Next year in our district the classes are going up to 42. We save that kind of grading for the big important writing assignments and give everything else a few "pity points" for effort.

Yeah. There is much to be said for a teacher's ineptness - I mean... lack of ability... er... fuck it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: iHateyou on 2009 June 03, 04:13:28
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?

Sure I could do my job, if I devoted more time to it than there is hours in the day. So no, I cannot do my job. If you think you can, be my guest.

*by the way, that might not be relevant since I am not actually a teacher!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jack Rudd on 2009 June 03, 18:05:15
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?

Sure I could do my job, if I devoted more time to it than there is hours in the day.
(http://wikka.moreawesomethanyou.com/images/3/3e/Subjectverbcat.png)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 05, 22:30:05
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?

Sure I could do my job, if I devoted more time to it than there is hours in the day. So no, I cannot do my job. If you think you can, be my guest.

*by the way, that might not be relevant since I am not actually a teacher!

Sucks to be your ass-mar.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Giggy on 2009 June 05, 23:42:42
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?
So no, I cannot do my job. If you think you can, be my guest.
I'm surprised that they haven't fired you. I mean, if you can't do your job then you must be a useless tool.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 06, 01:34:16
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?

Sure I could do my job, if I devoted more time to it than there is hours in the day. So no, I cannot do my job. If you think you can, be my guest.

*by the way, that might not be relevant since I am not actually a teacher!

I was going to say, my job is cleaning up after the edumacational messes that teachers make, but then you said you aren't a teacher. So why are you bitching, again?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 June 06, 01:39:19
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?

Sure I could do my job, if I devoted more time to it than there is hours in the day. So no, I cannot do my job. If you think you can, be my guest.

*by the way, that might not be relevant since I am not actually a teacher!

I was going to say, my job is cleaning up after the edumacational messes that teachers make, but then you said you aren't a teacher. So why are you bitching, again?

As long as I live, there will *ALWAYS* be people that have no fucking clue what working in the education system is like that will decide they have an edumacated two cents to contribute on how teachers or lecturers operate. If they'd give us an actual two cents for each of these morons, we'd be damn wealthy and wouldn't have to teach their spawns.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: iHateyou on 2009 June 06, 03:18:40
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?

Sure I could do my job, if I devoted more time to it than there is hours in the day. So no, I cannot do my job. If you think you can, be my guest.

*by the way, that might not be relevant since I am not actually a teacher!

I was going to say, my job is cleaning up after the edumacational messes that teachers make, but then you said you aren't a teacher. So why are you bitching, again?

Since you asked so nicely... I am not a teacher. I know teachers, live with teachers, and I volunteer with teachers. The reason I have not been fired, is simply because they are grateful to have a little help, despite the fact that there is too much work for me to finish. My job includes grading mountains of papers for very overworked teachers. I see what they are up against with the enormous class sizes my teachers are saddled with now.  By the way a teacher's job description does not include any specific way they must grade papers. Their job is to teach, and most of them do the best they can with what they have.  In our current economic situation, teachers are not even allowed to make photo copies anymore (in my district) much less given any other type of supplies. Everything comes out of their pocket. They receive very little respect, no understanding, and far too much abuse. What I have seen has caused me to change my career choices completely, because there is no way I want to mess with any of that. The last thing I want is to spend all day trying to teach today's horrible children, just to have them mock you, destroy your materials, and then have their equally nasty parents come and scream at you for their own failures.

Why am I bitching? I wasn't bitching before, but now I am! The reason I replied is because I felt your comment showed the typical amount of ignorance of what it actually means to try to do this job, and I'm confident that I am right. I'd like to see what you look like after just one year of trying to keep 200 teenagers alive, much less teach them something that they don't want to learn.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 June 06, 04:04:21
So you are essentially admitting you can't do your job?

Sure I could do my job, if I devoted more time to it than there is hours in the day. So no, I cannot do my job. If you think you can, be my guest.

*by the way, that might not be relevant since I am not actually a teacher!

I was going to say, my job is cleaning up after the edumacational messes that teachers make, but then you said you aren't a teacher. So why are you bitching, again?

Since you asked so nicely... I am not a teacher. I know teachers, live with teachers, and I volunteer with teachers. The reason I have not been fired, is simply because they are grateful to have a little help, despite the fact that there is too much work for me to finish. My job includes grading mountains of papers for very overworked teachers. I see what they are up against with the enormous class sizes my teachers are saddled with now.  By the way a teacher's job description does not include any specific way they must grade papers. Their job is to teach, and most of them do the best they can with what they have.  In our current economic situation, teachers are not even allowed to make photo copies anymore (in my district) much less given any other type of supplies. Everything comes out of their pocket. They receive very little respect, no understanding, and far too much abuse. What I have seen has caused me to change my career choices completely, because there is no way I want to mess with any of that. The last thing I want is to spend all day trying to teach today's horrible children, just to have them mock you, destroy your materials, and then have their equally nasty parents come and scream at you for their own failures.

Why am I bitching? I wasn't bitching before, but now I am! The reason I replied is because I felt your comment showed the typical amount of ignorance of what it actually means to try to do this job, and I'm confident that I am right. I'd like to see what you look like after just one year of trying to keep 200 teenagers alive, much less teach them something that they don't want to learn.

That's pretty much the reason why I wouldn't be dumb enough to do it in the first place. I've had plenty of dog's jobs too. But instead of bitching about it, I find a different career.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 06, 06:04:22
Why am I bitching? I wasn't bitching before, but now I am! The reason I replied is because I felt your comment showed the typical amount of ignorance of what it actually means to try to do this job, and I'm confident that I am right. I'd like to see what you look like after just one year of trying to keep 200 teenagers alive, much less teach them something that they don't want to learn.

Why do you automatically assume I am speaking from ignorance? Do you know what I do for a living?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 June 06, 06:41:34
Why am I bitching? I wasn't bitching before, but now I am! The reason I replied is because I felt your comment showed the typical amount of ignorance of what it actually means to try to do this job, and I'm confident that I am right. I'd like to see what you look like after just one year of trying to keep 200 teenagers alive, much less teach them something that they don't want to learn.

Why do you automatically assume I am speaking from ignorance? Do you know what I do for a living?

Hey you DO look familiar! Did I see you working at Dairy Queen last night?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 06, 07:27:44
I would admit to being busted, but there is no DQ in Sydney, so sucks to you, Kiki. If only I had kept that tenure track job at UNSW, eh?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: psikfreak on 2009 June 06, 07:47:38

Since you asked so nicely... I am not a teacher. I know teachers, live with teachers, and I volunteer with teachers. The reason I have not been fired, is simply because they are grateful to have a little help, despite the fact that there is too much work for me to finish. My job includes grading mountains of papers for very overworked teachers. I see what they are up against with the enormous class sizes my teachers are saddled with now.  By the way a teacher's job description does not include any specific way they must grade papers. Their job is to teach, and most of them do the best they can with what they have.  In our current economic situation, teachers are not even allowed to make photo copies anymore (in my district) much less given any other type of supplies. Everything comes out of their pocket. They receive very little respect, no understanding, and far too much abuse. What I have seen has caused me to change my career choices completely, because there is no way I want to mess with any of that. The last thing I want is to spend all day trying to teach today's horrible children, just to have them mock you, destroy your materials, and then have their equally nasty parents come and scream at you for their own failures.

Why am I bitching? I wasn't bitching before, but now I am! The reason I replied is because I felt your comment showed the typical amount of ignorance of what it actually means to try to do this job, and I'm confident that I am right. I'd like to see what you look like after just one year of trying to keep 200 teenagers alive, much less teach them something that they don't want to learn.


Oh, yay. Edited those extraneous quotes out correctly. Small things.

Now, I've had my MATY account dumped at least twice that I can recall. Why? I am not one of the Awesome people around here. I can see the site in full from guest view so virtually never log in. Why? Because, to reiterate, I am not one of the Awesome people around here. I come, I use search, I rarely attempt to post because I know I am not one of the Awesome people.

When I do post I exercise caution in what I say and how I say it. Why? It's MATY. For the same reason I warn people I meet in the Sims community to try all available remedies for their Sims ailment before coming here. And to humbly list said attempts before asking for help. Imbeciles are the favorite chum for the denizens whom lurk within MATY.

I skipped over the majority of the posts -for which I will stand still and take my lumps. I was not going to post, however seeing, well, what I would call verbal diarrhea if said to me in person, in your post I changed my mind.

Last time I checked part of teaching was checking to make sure your students are learning. That is done with homework and tests. Which, must be graded to ascertain if a student is learning. Therefore, grading papers is a part of their job. Whether stated in small words for individuals of dubious intelligence such as yourself or as an implied responsibility of their position.

If teachers in your district are not allowed to make copies take it up with the PTA, school board, superintendent, etc. It has no bearing on the discussion at hand.

Teachers in this day and age (in the USA) receive very little respect, no understanding, and far too much abuse because society and the government permit it/refuse to support them. Again, this has no bearing on the discussion at hand.

Further, today's children are 'horrible' because their parents are to self-absorbed and incompetent to raise a child. Society makes excuses for those children, e.g. they come from underprivileged homes, etc. And finally because people like you was their hands of them. It's so much easier than tackling a problem that you haven't created but could remedy.

You think teachers get the short end of the stick, try being a school bus driver for three years for everything from elementary kids from the local ghetto to spoiled high school brats. Try working in a teacher's assistant capacity in the most underprivileged elementary school in the city. Finally, try doing behavioral management with a therapy firm for an entire year with elementary students born premature, treated like animals, and sexually abused to high school kids who's only goal in life is to join a gang and die in a drive by.

Nobody goes into any of those for kudos, pats on the back, or warm fuzzies. After doing the required time as a student teacher any individual going into the field who doesn't grasp the thankless nature of the position is blind, ignorant, stupid, what have you. And they get what they deserve.

I personally go back every year to drive a bus because if, after all the abuse and nonsense, I've reached one child, gotten one child to think, made a difference, an impact then I have succeeded. And that's ALL the thanks I need, my warm fuzzies, etc.

Oh, and for the record -you can't teach anyone who doesn't want to learn. What you can do is try to motivate them to want to learn through various means. Somehow, I do not think you would be good at that, given the attitude you've displayed. And I am thankful you are not a teacher. Children need a firm hand. Limits and rules. They also need hope -something you are sadly lacking.

Now, as for egregious spelling and grammatical errors. I will run this through Word, it will tell me it has everything fixed, and I'll believe it because I don't see them. But you don't hear me whining about it. I attempt to remedy the problem. Have I failed, will I fail? Yes, and most likely. But I bloody well tried and here at MATY effort is noted and appreciated. Not whining, bitching, and making pathetic excuses.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: morriganrant on 2009 June 06, 09:15:05
It is also possible to be so stubbornly ungrammatical that you get an exemption in the form of Teflon or lifetime Teflon. Examples:  morriganrant, Tigerlilley and Bangelnuts.

Only popping in here to say that I do not mind the sporking, not that I needed to give permission. How else will I learn? In the years that I have been here, lurking or otherwise, my written presence has improved substantially. This should be an indication of how poorly I was doing before. It was quite frightening. Now writing such as that causes me to cringe, and my eyes glaze over in defense.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 June 06, 10:34:43
I would admit to being busted, but there is no DQ in Sydney, so sucks to you, Kiki. If only I had kept that tenure track job at UNSW, eh?

Oh but there is now :D It's near Chinatown and going there after 3pm will probably get you knifed, but it's totally worth it. We've got Coldstone now too, so yeyz! DOLLAR DOLLAR TIP, BITCHES.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 June 06, 17:13:31
After doing the required time as a student teacher any individual going into the field who doesn't grasp the thankless nature of the position is blind, ignorant, stupid, what have you. And they get what they deserve.

My sentiment exactly.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Stitches on 2009 June 08, 18:20:05
Am I the only one that feels that any teacher that needs to outsource their grading is DOING IT WRONG?

*edit: I am not talking out of my ass here. I have several years of being a TA and am working on my credential concurrently with my degree.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 June 09, 01:34:34
Am I the only one that feels that any teacher that needs to outsource their grading is DOING IT WRONG?

*edit: I am not talking out of my ass here. I have several years of being a TA and am working on my credential concurrently with my degree.

When I was high-school teaching I never had a problem with doing my own marking and getting my work done - did it take a large chunk of my social life that I wished it hadn't? Sure...but I still managed to do my OWN work and what was required of me without having to pass it off on others. The salary I was on was the only reason I left teaching for a higher paid job,  I never had a problem with doing the work because I knew what I was in for...too many people think that teaching is what they see on TV, that it ends once you leave the classroom, which is why they get butthurt when they realise the work involved.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: femsuii on 2009 June 09, 15:40:08
Yes, and also, if we can manage to be coherent in a language that is not our first, those who grow up with it should be able to as well. Argh.

Agreed, it sometimes makes it hard to actually understand what a person is saying when they write it incorrect giving it a totally different definition.

Quote
Ah fuck up and die!

LMFAO! I just knew someone would fail to sense my sarcasm, yet I'm amazed by it all the same. I thought it was pretty obvious.


Obvious and painfull, yes.

'Lol...' seriously, that's all I have to say to both your replies. You are so closed-minded you can't see the grey (I assume you're a Brit?)  in between. Well, I tried to put another point across but you're not having any of it, so I suppose it's just another shame. Oh gosh, I used wiggles to emphasize my name, that MUST mean I'm a pleb. And my attitude? It's a good one to have, I'm proud of it, I know I'm a fair person. Don't worry though, you can have your little obsession back, I can see you're never going to open your eyes. It would just be nice if you were nicer to people, even when you want to get a grammar point across.

I assume you're doing it on purpose now? At least someone is proud... :roll:

It's not as simple as that because they came back at me telling me i meant things that i had never written. Twisting ways i had worded things. Like some of the examples i brought up. The words i use are the words i mean, if i don't say things like 'i think you should all change for me' then thats what i meant to not put. But i've had people coming back to me with 'oh so you want us to change for you' type thing. Near the beginning i said how a spelling mistake is so bad, and i got things back saying that you basically have no intelligence if you don't capitalize something etc. So from asking an innocent enough question, people make it personal by stating what a person is if they don't spell the way THEY want. Then telling me how i don't get the way it works here even though more than once i had stated i understood. So if i took care to make it clear i understood, yet still got people repeating themselves that i didn't, just who has made the mistake there. Not me! Bottom line on the subject of this thread though, is that this site would still be good and non-n00bish even if people forgot the odd apostrophe or capital. The odd grammar drop isn't the same as people coming on going 'yo peepz, sims 3 iz da bomb (or not as the case may be) ^.^ w00t'. And it seems to be that people don't want THAT type on here?

I guess they just didn't teach you comprehensive reading when you were in school?  :o

And it's just a hopeless cause... I'm not going to correct all the errors, because it's time consuming. You just like being recalcitrant?
It's just that in this day its natural to not worry too much about grammar on the net. And we're not even talking about jumbled up words here, they're on about things like not capitalising an 'I'. While some people may be anal about spelling, this type of mishap won't in any way affect a post.

Actually, when (native) people start to spell things/use grammar incorrectly, it makes it harder for a foreigner to comprehend what it's saying since there really is a difference between (e.g.) "your" and "you're".

Thats just the way i type. I don't use silly n00b speak, or 'pmsl' everywhere, but yeah, i do cut corners with capital I's. And it's not riddled with errors. And 'in your opinion is annoying', yes. I also love the way you use 'we' to refer to yourselves. It's like your a cult or something. You seem to forget you don't own the site, even if you feel you are some type of minion. Pescado hasn't once really said anything himself about how to behave with grammar, this thread wasn't even created by him! I said i understood, now you are telling me AGAIN that i don't and telling me the reason why you think it. I'm careful that i type things to an 'alright' standard, but i know i just won't be able to keep to making sure every tiny thing is done 'the proper' way. And it has nothing to so with doing it 'intentionally'. It's my habit, but it gets me by. If the guy in charge asks me to try harder than perhaps it's more worth thinking about. 

I'm not trying to 'win' anything. Was just having a conversation

Apparently, it's very hard for you to type correct. Hint: typ your posts (interlarded with ignorance) in word before posting, and don't forget to adjust "i" with "I" in autocorrect. Yes, it is that simple :D

Oh crap, and now she got canned. That's what I get for almost always reading the entire thread... :roll:


It's sad, really.  I noticed that my son's teachers don't bother to correct his spelling or grammar on most of his assignments because it's "the substance that matters" to them.  Apparently, AOLspeak is changing the way papers are graded.  Why in the hell has it become commonplace?   

This probably also has something to do with overly PC public school teachers nowadays that are afraid to correct kids, fearing the wrath of child-centered parents.

Actually it probably has more to do with the fact that your kid's classes probably have 38+ students in each class. When you teach at least 200 students a day you cannot correct everything on each assignment. Next year in our district the classes are going up to 42. We save that kind of grading for the big important writing assignments and give everything else a few "pity points" for effort.

I don't see the problem? In both primary and high school most of my classes consisted of 30-40 students and they always corrected everything.


Since you asked so nicely... I am not a teacher. I know teachers, live with teachers, and I volunteer with teachers. The reason I have not been fired, is simply because they are grateful to have a little help, despite the fact that there is too much work for me to finish. My job includes grading mountains of papers for very overworked teachers. I see what they are up against with the enormous class sizes my teachers are saddled with now.  By the way a teacher's job description does not include any specific way they must grade papers. Their job is to teach, and most of them do the best they can with what they have.  In our current economic situation, teachers are not even allowed to make photo copies anymore (in my district) much less given any other type of supplies. Everything comes out of their pocket. They receive very little respect, no understanding, and far too much abuse. What I have seen has caused me to change my career choices completely, because there is no way I want to mess with any of that. The last thing I want is to spend all day trying to teach today's horrible children, just to have them mock you, destroy your materials, and then have their equally nasty parents come and scream at you for their own failures.

Why am I bitching? I wasn't bitching before, but now I am! The reason I replied is because I felt your comment showed the typical amount of ignorance of what it actually means to try to do this job, and I'm confident that I am right. I'd like to see what you look like after just one year of trying to keep 200 teenagers alive, much less teach them something that they don't want to learn.

If you're not a teacher, WTH are you doing grading papers? And by teaching I think they actually mean teaching correct *language*, so correcting grammar and/or spelling on papers is - IMO - teaching.


Oh, yay. Edited those extraneous quotes out correctly. Small things.

Now, I've had my MATY account dumped at least twice that I can recall. Why? I am not one of the Awesome people around here. I can see the site in full from guest view so virtually never log in. Why? Because, to reiterate, I am not one of the Awesome people around here. I come, I use search, I rarely attempt to post because I know I am not one of the Awesome people.

When I do post I exercise caution in what I say and how I say it. Why? It's MATY. For the same reason I warn people I meet in the Sims community to try all available remedies for their Sims ailment before coming here. And to humbly list said attempts before asking for help. Imbeciles are the favorite chum for the denizens whom lurk within MATY.

I skipped over the majority of the posts -for which I will stand still and take my lumps. I was not going to post, however seeing, well, what I would call verbal diarrhea if said to me in person, in your post I changed my mind.

Last time I checked part of teaching was checking to make sure your students are learning. That is done with homework and tests. Which, must be graded to ascertain if a student is learning. Therefore, grading papers is a part of their job. Whether stated in small words for individuals of dubious intelligence such as yourself or as an implied responsibility of their position.

If teachers in your district are not allowed to make copies take it up with the PTA, school board, superintendent, etc. It has no bearing on the discussion at hand.

Teachers in this day and age (in the USA) receive very little respect, no understanding, and far too much abuse because society and the government permit it/refuse to support them. Again, this has no bearing on the discussion at hand.

Further, today's children are 'horrible' because their parents are to self-absorbed and incompetent to raise a child. Society makes excuses for those children, e.g. they come from underprivileged homes, etc. And finally because people like you wash their hands of them. It's so much easier than tackling a problem that you haven't created but could remedy.

You think teachers get the short end of the stick, try being a school bus driver for three years for everything from elementary kids from the local ghetto to spoiled high school brats. Try working in a teacher's assistant capacity in the most underprivileged elementary school in the city. Finally, try doing behavioral management with a therapy firm for an entire year with elementary students born premature, treated like animals, and sexually abused to high school kids who's only goal in life is to join a gang and die in a drive by.

Nobody goes into any of those for kudos, pats on the back, or warm fuzzies. After doing the required time as a student teacher any individual going into the field who doesn't grasp the thankless nature of the position is blind, ignorant, stupid, what have you. And they get what they deserve.

I personally go back every year to drive a bus because if, after all the abuse and nonsense, I've reached one child, gotten one child to think, made a difference, an impact then I have succeeded. And that's ALL the thanks I need, my warm fuzzies, etc.

Oh, and for the record -you can't teach anyone who doesn't want to learn. What you can do is try to motivate them to want to learn through various means. Somehow, I do not think you would be good at that, given the attitude you've displayed. And I am thankful you are not a teacher. Children need a firm hand. Limits and rules. They also need hope -something you are sadly lacking.

Now, as for egregious spelling and grammatical errors. I will run this through Word, it will tell me it has everything fixed, and I'll believe it because I don't see them. But you don't hear me whining about it. I attempt to remedy the problem. Have I failed, will I fail? Yes, and most likely. But I bloody well tried and here at MATY effort is noted and appreciated. Not whining, bitching, and making pathetic excuses.


Look again.


* Going back to lurk mode*


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 June 09, 15:52:45
Really?  Delurking to revive an argument that's been dead for over a week?  After you saw that she'd been canned, that seems like a good time to delete everything pertaining to it since you could clearly see it was no longer relevant. 

By the way, it really helps if you only quote the relevant parts of the post rather than the entire thing.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zaphod Beeblebrox on 2009 June 09, 17:03:04
Actually it probably has more to do with the fact that your kid's classes probably have 38+ students in each class. When you teach at least 200 students a day you cannot correct everything on each assignment. Next year in our district the classes are going up to 42. We save that kind of grading for the big important writing assignments and give everything else a few "pity points" for effort.

Actually, no.  Thank you for assuming that my son attends a city public school where, yes, there's hardly any funding and teachers to go around in over-populated classrooms, but he doesn't.  He attends a township school that's small in a classroom where there's only 17 kids.  This is a classroom where the teacher even has two goddamn assistants to help her.

In my day, if you received quite a few Fs on your report card, you were held back, but that's no longer true.  It has more to do with schools trying to push kids ahead even though they're barely grasping what they're learning because of the No Child Left Behind Act.  For something that's supposed to help children succeed and reward corporations that are doing an excellent job of teaching, it's really just causing school boards and superintendents to get their panties in a collective twist over trying to make their kids look like they are exceptional geniuses, and that the teachers aren't just there to collect their paychecks and make tenure (hell, that happened in my day; teachers who didn't care anymore after they made tenure).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 09, 19:17:32
We

So this is the opposite of the royal we, then?
Like... the peasant we?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: cassblonde on 2009 June 10, 12:05:27
In my day, if you received quite a few Fs on your report card, you were held back, but that's no longer true.  It has more to do with schools trying to push kids ahead even though they're barely grasping what they're learning because of the No Child Left Behind Act. 

I have to comment here as I think No Child Left Behind is American and I am in Canada. My son got all Rs(It's the new F ::)) on his first grade one report card. I met with my school's principal and my son's teacher about holding him back to let him have another stab at grade one since he just wasn't absorbing the information. I was told then that the main reason they push kids ahead(in Canada anyway) is due to social reasons rather than academic ones. I thought that was pretty lame but I would have had to fight my regional board of education to get them to hold him back so I let them put him up with his classmates.

In my school system if your child is identified as learning delayed they will set up an individual education plan so although he is in with his same age classmates he's being taught at his level and being given tools to learn how to learn and work with the faulting wiring in his head rather than trying to learn in a way he is failing at. Not the best solution but it works and he seems happy to go to school even though he is not quite as far along in some areas as his classmates.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 10, 17:24:48
This system works well for the kids who are average or "delayed", but sucks donkey balls for the bright ones.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zaphod Beeblebrox on 2009 June 10, 17:52:17
It sucks for all involved, truly.  The only program they had for "gifted" kids when I was a wee lass was something called PACE, and I was a part of it for only a short amount of time before I was kicked out due to my non-religious family (something about "being involved in the community" was included in the requirements for being a member).  The same thing happened to me with National Junior Honor Society and National Honor Society (couldn't even begin to join those because I wasn't "involved in the community").  Advanced classes at my high school were also a joke, and since we were a very small school of about 200, if a class in which you wanted to enroll had less than 2 kids in it, that class was canned.

I know all about IEPs.  We have them in America, too.  All three of my kids have one (my oldest has ADHD and a speech impediment, my middle child has a chromosome disorder which makes him moderately retarded, and my youngest also has ADHD and a speech impediment), and something I've noticed in this school corporation is that they don't even bother to follow the ones they write up and have you sign.  Example:  my oldest son's IEP states that because of his disorders, he must have an assistant help him with his regular classwork (and no one helps him at this school, but he received help at previous schools with the same IEP), and as requested by his doctor, he needs to complete his homework at school because his medication wears off around 4pm, and he starts to get too irritable and tired to concentrate (another thing they don't do).  I help him with what I can (I can't help him with this newfangled math; it was never my favorite subject in any case), but I can't control what those dimwits do with him at school.  Hell, he has asthma that's aggravated by the outdoors, so he's not supposed to go outside for recess, but they ignore the doctor's orders and still send him out anyway.

Eh, I know they push kids along because of social reasons (just like they don't tend to skip smarter kids ahead several grades anymore because they aren't "emotionally" ready), but the desire to look successful and receive funding also pushes kids along who shouldn't be (as was told to me by a friend of mine in the Minneapolis urban school corporation).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Stitches on 2009 June 10, 18:17:05
The only program they had for "gifted" kids when I was a wee lass was something called PACE, and I was a part of it for only a short amount of time before I was kicked out due to my non-religious family (something about "being involved in the community" was included in the requirements for being a member).  The same thing happened to me with National Junior Honor Society and National Honor Society (couldn't even begin to join those because I wasn't "involved in the community").
I am confused as to why not being religious kept you from being involved in the community? While it is true that many societies are religious in nature, they do not require you to be religious to help.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 10, 18:21:24
Sounds like some crazy Bible School "Special Program." Or Zaphod lived in some crazy Mormon commune.

Only GT class I've ever heard of endorsing community involvement was AP classes, and that was because they want you to get tons of scholarships. It wasn't enforced either, but they would help you if you were trying for something Camp Fire or Scouts related. Sister got her Wohelo thanks to her AP coach.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Stitches on 2009 June 10, 19:20:08
It's true that a lot of schools force it on the brighter kids because they know that community participation is becoming a big issue with upper tier universities. As it should be. It's possible that if we had more high school students working in situations that force them to consider a larger world than their high school microcosm, they might not be entering universities as such entitled brats.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zaphod Beeblebrox on 2009 June 10, 19:57:43
Actually, I grew up in a small farming community in southeastern Indiana where if you weren't Christian, you were some sort of freak, and since my father was a "loud and proud atheist," our family was not liked by many.  Also, "being involved with the community" is all fine and dandy when it means actually doing community work, but what our school board meant by "being involved" was "going to church".  Yes, I was discriminated against, and I suppose my family could have fought to get me included, but I had no backbone in those days (hence, I didn't want to be even more ostracized by my peers), so I chose to remain silent on the matter.  Probably wouldn't have won against the school anyway considering that I went to school in the '80s, and atheism was still relatively a new concept in small town America.

Eh, even if the requirements were actually about community service instead of religious intolerance, I still wouldn't have been able to participate.  I lived 5 miles outside of town with no way to get to town (as in "not allowed") to even do any sort of community service.  In the end, someone always loses out no matter what.

In closing, Indiana (most parts of it) = armpit of Hell.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 10, 21:53:33
It's more probable that if parents would take their entitled brats in hand before they became so, they wouldn't arrive at university as such. The idea that one is going to change the entitled mindset is ludicrous. The entitled brat who attends university will in nearly every case remain an entitled brat, "community participation" or no. In fact, it has been my experience that many of the most active community participants in the the many places I've lived are the most self-important, self-absorbed, entitled fucksticks I've ever had the displeasure to meet.

A requirement by an university to "participate in the community" is nothing more than forced indoctrination. A large part of the problem with the distinct downturn in the quality of American education is that more time is spent with socialization than academic and vocational knowledge, from grade school through university. It is the right of the individual to choose their level of community involvement, even if that means as little participation as possible. Then, this comes from a pirate and misanthrope of the "take what you can, give nothing back" variety.

It is the responsibility of the parent to teach their children to play well with others, and the academic institution to impart knowledge.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: lemmiwinks on 2009 June 10, 23:42:37
teebs, I would have to say that was nothing short of an outstanding first post. It seems the educational system is  working somewhere.
Welcome to MATY.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 11, 02:17:48
Thank you very much, lemmiwinks. My blue collar, high school drop out parents' efforts paid off. Five children; five college graduates. My public school experience had little to do with it.

I appreciate the welcome. I read through this thread with more than a little amusement. I am a convicted Grammar Nazi, and this site always provides good, satisfying entertainment. I've been lurking here for years, not finding a need to post. I either find answers to my queries through a little searching, or (my preference) I find my own solution.

The baiting and ridicule tossed about among the cohort of more articulate members reminds me of my family's rather voluble barbecues. I love it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LMahesa on 2009 June 11, 04:46:37
I do believe this has been the most entertaining thread I have ever read. Now, before I go LURK MOAR, I'd like to point a vaguely trembling finger in the direction of the registration page (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php?action=register).

The last time I checked, Assyria no longer existed as a nation, and therefore has no business having a capital city. Either the wrong answer is correct, or the grammar is wrong.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Rhayden on 2009 June 11, 04:56:26
I do believe this has been the most entertaining thread I have ever read. Now, before I go LURK MOAR, I'd like to point a vaguely trembling finger in the direction of the registration page (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php?action=register).

The last time I checked, Assyria no longer existed as a nation, and therefore has no business having a capital city. Either the wrong answer is correct, or the grammar is wrong.


The point, you have missed it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 11, 05:34:51
Indeed. Grammar is not enough, you must also understand literary and pop culture references.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 June 11, 05:57:11
A requirement by an university to "participate in the community" is nothing more than forced indoctrination. A large part of the problem with the distinct downturn in the quality of American education is that more time is spent with socialization than academic and vocational knowledge, from grade school through university. It is the right of the individual to choose their level of community involvement, even if that means as little participation as possible. Then, this comes from a pirate and misanthrope of the "take what you can, give nothing back" variety.

It is the responsibility of the parent to teach their children to play well with others, and the academic institution to impart knowledge.

Jesus God yes, thank you.  My institution currently has a big thing about "Service Learning."  A year or two ago, I noticed that the Dean had suggested that I might like to look into using Service Learning, and this was duly passed up the chain to the framming Provost, so that it went in my Retention/Tenure/Promotion letter for that year.  It turns out that every single professor who still had to go through the tenure and promotion process that year was advised to use Service Learning.  Every single one.  Luckily, I don't ever have to go through that process again, so I can just ignore any more of their brilliant ideas.

I don't have any problem with it if it's relevant, but I think it's very tone-deaf to the actual needs of our students.  I'm teaching Shakespeare:  what kind of Service Learning are my students supposed to do with that?  Teach younger kids Shakespeare?  They don't know it themselves.  Most of our students are working; many are studying to be teachers, which often means a lot of teaching practice and internships (REAL Service Learning); and a lot of them have families of their own.  They're already having difficulties carving out the time to take classes and study.  What if every class they took had a serious Service Learning component?  It seems cruel, unnecessary--and stupid.  The real reason administrators like it is that it makes the University look good ("see?  We are Serving the Needs Of The Community!") 

I just want my students to sit down, shut up, and read.  I'll be happy to grade their papers, answer questions, even listen to their opinions about the reading.  I'm a competent professor, and a completely untrained and uninterested social worker.  Why not let me get on with my job?  Sheesh.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 11, 06:03:04
Well, prof buttsecks, Shakespeare is, like, really, really old. Maybe they could knit him an afghan and send him a card saying "thanks for the plays" to his nursing home.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 June 11, 06:14:19
I do believe this has been the most entertaining thread I have ever read. Now, before I go LURK MOAR, I'd like to point a vaguely trembling finger in the direction of the registration page (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php?action=register).

The last time I checked, Assyria no longer existed as a nation, and therefore has no business having a capital city. Either the wrong answer is correct, or the grammar is wrong.


(http://img36.imageshack.us/img36/1041/worstcapcha.jpg)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LMahesa on 2009 June 11, 06:49:19
Indeed. Grammar is not enough, you must also understand literary and pop culture references.

Holy Grail, perchance? No matter. On a related note, here's an excessively detailed article on Estimating the Airspeed Velocity of an Unladen Swallow (http://www.style.org/unladenswallow/).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: awrevell on 2009 June 11, 07:08:11
Am I the only one that feels that any teacher that needs to outsource their grading is DOING IT WRONG?

My sister is a teacher. More than once I have been at her house on a weekend and seen her grading papers late in the evening.  One time I offered to help her grade papers and she replied "(i)f I don't grade their papers, I won't know what they need help with."  Therefore I can say with certainty, "no, you aren't the only one who feels that they are doing it wrong". :)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 11, 07:14:26
"Service Learning." How droll. I suppose using "Community Service" makes it sound rather less appealing.

My main concern with the whole concept is the incessant brainwashing used by teachers or the university to further their own social/political agendas. I've seen first hand the power that professors wield over children away from home for the first time. Their mindset is similar to that of someone being indoctrinated into a cult. I watched a teacher actively use cult tactics such as love-bombing to further the agenda of a sociopolitical organization of which she is a member.

As a firm believer in the principle that the individual is greater than the group, this type of activity terrifies me. Then, groups terrify me anyway. The current trend in socialist conformity literally makes me shiver. Conformity breeds stagnation and rewards mediocrity. There is already more than enough mediocrity in this world, where the stupid breed without surcease, and the intellectually superior worry about overpopulation and don't breed at all.

Universities are filled to the brim with students who have no business being there and are putting themselves into massive debt to attain a degree that becomes more worthless with each passing year. Higher education is NOT for everyone. Why is it that "leveling the playing field" invariably means making it easier for the stupid ones?

I could get into the role of government in this trend and the current dumbing down of the populace as a form of crowd control, but then I'd begin to sound like a paranoid freak.

I couldn't resist adding this; "Once the number three, being the third number, be reached, then lobbest thou thy Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch towards thy foe, who, being naughty in my sight, shall snuff it."


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LMahesa on 2009 June 11, 07:28:11
<snip>
There is already more than enough mediocrity in this world, where the stupid breed without surcease, and the intellectually superior worry about overpopulation and don't breed at all.

Idiocracy (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387808/). A disturbingly prophetic movie disguised as a lame comedy.

Quote
Higher education is NOT for everyone. Why is it that "leveling the playing field" invariably means making it easier for the stupid ones?

I don't know about the states, but that phrase is being bandied about more and more in the UK, and gaining a foothold in Asia. "Our system of education is borked, so we're going to make the tests easier to make it seem the kids are brighter."


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LMahesa on 2009 June 11, 07:46:02
Am I the only one that feels that any teacher that needs to outsource their grading is DOING IT WRONG?

My sister is a teacher. ... she replied "(i)f I don't grade their papers, I won't know what they need help with."

I sympathize. I teach ESL in Indonesia, and it is an unfortunate fact that many, if not most, of the teachers here aren't overly concerned with learning what the students' needs are, beyond what they glean in-class -- especially in a Korean school, where the grades can be completely arbitrary, and are quite frequently fixed to reach class average goals set by the Korean Department of Education.

However, not all the blame can be shouldered by the teachers - timing is an issue. I currently work in a Korean school's native speaker department, whose focus is iBT TOEFL. We are currently at the beginning of the end-of-semester testing period. Usually, we have one week to test speaking and writing with an extra 3 days to finish grading. THIS year, the Koreans decided to add another, unrelated, integrated (1 unqualified Korean teacher, 1 native speaker) iBT class which resulted in an additional week of testing. So that's 2x speaking and 2x writing to grade, in 3 days, for roughly 150 students per grade, per teacher.

The temptation is understandable.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 11, 08:18:39
Idiocracy (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387808/). A disturbingly prophetic movie disguised as a lame comedy.

Idiocracy is brilliant...and tragic in its dead-on glimpse into our future. Mike Judge excels at social commentary channeled through sophomoric humor.

I don't know about the states, but that phrase is being bandied about more and more in the UK, and gaining a foothold in Asia. "Our system of education is borked, so we're going to make the tests easier to make it seem the kids are brighter."

In the states "leveling the playing field" is the politically correct terminology for catering to the lowest common denominator, and is being used all too frequently.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 June 11, 08:43:04
My main concern with the whole concept is the incessant brainwashing used by teachers or the university to further their own social/political agendas. I've seen first hand the power that professors wield over children away from home for the first time.

Children.  Interesting choice of words there.  I'd go so far as to say that this is part of the problem.  CHILDREN have no place at a university.  The university is a place for young adults who are given the opportunity to sample ideas, weigh them, choose what makes sense to them, make choices, and experience the consequences of said choices.  "Brainwashed" young adults, in my experience, are simply those who go home at Thanksgiving and get an enormous charge out of freaking out their parents with social and political ideas that they know won't be welcome (and tattoos. Let's not forget the tattoos.)  It's easy to blame professors for this, but stupid, as I don't know any two professors who agree on anything.  The problem, if there is one, comes from the administration and the political pressure exerted on the administration. 

Rohina, a lot of my students aren't even clear that Shakespeare wrote plays.  They insist on calling his work "books," or worse, "novels."  And I don't think many of them can do something as practical as knitting.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: daisywenham on 2009 June 11, 11:33:28
Quote
In the states "leveling the playing field" is the politically correct terminology for catering to the lowest common denominator, and is being used all too frequently.

10-15 years ago in Wisconsin there was some talk about lowering the eligibility grade for high school sports to a D because apparently there were a lot of athletes having trouble remaining eligible to play.  So um, your son is getting bad grades and your response is "OMG WHAT IF HE CAN'T PLAY FOOTBALL?!" 

On a related note, a town near where I attended high school built a third high school around the same time.  It was a huge school with all the best of everything.  They changed the zoning so that there were some kids from both existing high schools who would now be going to Appleton North as the new school was called.  The parents of some of the kids from Appleton East (which has long had a very successful football program) were upset that their children would have to go to North and would thus no longer have a winning football team to cheer/play for.

My favorite though is the bumper stickers you see around.  "We honor ALL students at <insert school name here>". 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 June 11, 13:00:30
It really IS just as bad for gifted children though; I started school at 4 years old as a 6, and was already reading at a significantly advanced level compared to my peers. I was breezing through books in Kindergarten that 2nd and 3rd graders were struggling with - my mothership told the school this, but due to my age and the belief in wanting to keep the status quo my school fought my family for a good 6 months attempting to hold me back a grade.

I'm still thankful to my parents that they fought so hard to keep my place and refused to let my school hold me back for my age - I ended up graduating approximately 18 months younger than everyone else in my class, but was equal dux of my grade senior year despite it. I spent most of my school years attempting to not appear to be that much smarter than everyone else and blending in, because in the modern schooling system you do NOT want to draw attention to yourself if you're too far advanced of the system you're in.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 June 11, 13:19:46
I ended up graduating approximately 18 months younger than everyone else in my class, but was equal dux of my grade senior year despite it. I spent most of my school years attempting to not appear to be that much smarter than everyone else and blending in, because in the modern schooling system you do NOT want to draw attention to yourself if you're too far advanced of the system you're in.

Yeah, I tried the "blending in" thing, but I was the victim of a tribe of sadistic educators who decided that 3 or 4 of us would be singled out as the poster boys for their "advanced student" policy.  This was ostensibly so that we could be seen as "tutorial resources" by the less apt students (trans: torture victims for the crowd that rubbed "tattoos" into their arms with pencil erasers and would not believe that I knew what an infection looked like).

I told the kid that his arm would get gangrene and fall off, mainly to relieve the boredom.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: LMahesa on 2009 June 11, 14:11:14
I told the kid that his arm would get gangrene and fall off, mainly to relieve the boredom.

You'd be done for child abuse for doing that in the UK now, and probably end up as a permanent entry in a List somewhere. Those were the good ol' days.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 11, 16:02:58
My main concern with the whole concept is the incessant brainwashing used by teachers or the university to further their own social/political agendas. I've seen first hand the power that professors wield over children away from home for the first time. Their mindset is similar to that of someone being indoctrinated into a cult. I watched a teacher actively use cult tactics such as love-bombing to further the agenda of a sociopolitical organization of which she is a member.

Yeah, asking students to question the assumptions they have grown up with is exactly tantamount to "indoctrination". Screw you, you anti-intellectual blue-collar elitist.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MuertoElBarto on 2009 June 11, 16:08:49
Rohina, a lot of my students aren't even clear that Shakespeare wrote plays.  They insist on calling his work "books," or worse, "novels."  And I don't think many of them can do something as practical as knitting.

I thought he was an old TV writer way back in the 70's.  He wrote those Three's Company plotlines - the ones that centered around mistaken identity, where hilarity ensued.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 11, 16:18:58
Yeah, I tried the "blending in" thing, but I was the victim of a tribe of sadistic educators who decided that 3 or 4 of us would be singled out as the poster boys for their "advanced student" policy.  This was ostensibly so that we could be seen as "tutorial resources" by the less apt students (trans: torture victims for the crowd that rubbed "tattoos" into their arms with pencil erasers and would not believe that I knew what an infection looked like).

I told the kid that his arm would get gangrene and fall off, mainly to relieve the boredom.


Oh, the forcing of the smart kid to "tutor" its bully. I refused to go to school for an entire week after my teacher tried that one on me in Grade 6. MiniB awesomely resists this by being really unhelpful. She got a bad mark in leadership because she stuck her fingers in her ears during reading time and refused to help the less able readers.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 June 11, 16:23:25
Oh, the forcing of the smart kid to "tutor" its bully. I refused to go to school for an entire week after my teacher tried that one on me in Grade 6. MiniB awesomely resists this by being really unhelpful. She got a bad mark in leadership because she stuck her fingers in her ears during reading time and refused to help the less able readers.

Awesome. I love MiniB.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 11, 18:11:39

Yeah, asking students to question the assumptions they have grown up with is exactly tantamount to "indoctrination". Screw you, you anti-intellectual blue-collar elitist.

Yes, I truly believe that reading is witchcraft and teachers should all be slowly spit-roasted over a fire produced by burning a nice blend of hickory and maple woods. I also believe everyone should be required to drive pickups and where bib overalls and the only things that need be taught in school are the Holy Bible and yer basic cypherin'.

Then again, it's possible that I believe that not every professor is best suited to ask their students to question their assumptions. Ultimately, since half the population (according to the bell curve anyway, I think it's more like ninety to ninety-nine percent) is stupid to varying degrees, it is fairly certain that at least one or two college professors are morons who shouldn't be teaching finger painting, much less attempting to affect the social consciousness of young people. So, eat me.

To the professor: Many of the people entering university are not young adults. Children are allowed to be less and less responsible, resulting in retarded maturation. I don't hold professors responsible for normal, healthy behavior or children questioning their childhood beliefs or good old rebellion against the system. I try to refrain from hypocrisy. Being tattooed myself, I find some humor in the parental discomfort caused by such an innocuous act of rebellion.

I am all for questioning, well, everything. Questioning and challenging the status quo is the responsibility of any intelligent person. First however, the person must learn such things as independent and active thinking. Since the current trend, at least in the states, is to teach children not to bother thinking, I believe they may not be prepared for a few of the more politically oriented, less intellectually savvy professors who actually believe that because they managed to grind out a dissertation at some lousy jerkwater state school, they are better able to determine what is best for everyone.

This isn't to say I believe that of all professors. In fact, I don't believe it to be the case with the majority, based on my own experience. I was nearly thirty before I entered university, and I believe I value the experience far more because of my age. I built lasting relationships based on mutual respect with a number of my professors. I place a high value on any strong mind, and I have great respect for the true teacher; not the ones who teach because they cannot do, but the ones who teach because they recognize that knowledge is the only thing of real, lasting value.

Blue-collar elitist.... still chuckling about that...


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 11, 18:57:57
So, the problem of immature speshul snowflakes who are unprepared for college is to be shouldered entirely by the professors? Despite what you want to argue about their relative maturity, the fact is that college students, in the VAST majority, are legally considered to be adults. Professors are bound by legislation like FOIP or FOIA (depending on the country), which means they have to treat students as adults and their relationship with students is not like that of a school teacher and a pupil.

Professors are there to teach, not to hand-hold and offer pastoral care. Even if I care deeply about a student (okay, stop laughing all you guys who know how mean I am), it's not appropriate for me to leap in and hand hold. My job is to present the material, to challenge students to think about it and to get them to meet specific learning and technical standards.

Your idea that stupid jerks who just barely manage to grind out a PhD (omg I can hardly type that without laughing) can get jobs in the current climate is absolutely hilarious.

Let me guess, all those professors with whom you built strong relationships gave you the grades you thought you deserved, but the ones who are stupid, and can only teach because they can't do, those ones were particularly thick-headed with regard to recognizing your brilliance.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 11, 20:08:54
Many of the people entering university are not young adults.

What are they?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: awrevell on 2009 June 11, 20:54:56
Many of the people entering university are not young adults.

What are they?

They are older men and women who for some reason need to improve their education.

I was 38 and had recently suffered a physical disability when I applied to university.  Prior to being disabled I enjoyed highly physical jobs; however that changed when a series of heart attacks put me on permanent light duty.  Unable to work the types of jobs I was trained for, and unwilling to live on the pittance paid by disability, I had to find a new way to work for a living.  I am now 40 and am currently working towards my degree in Game and Simulation Programming; hopefully I will learn from the mistakes of companies like EA and not be stupid when I start writing code for games.   


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 11, 21:02:48
So, the problem of immature speshul snowflakes who are unprepared for college is to be shouldered entirely by the professors?

This is a ridiculous question and hardly worthy of a response. I think it should be obvious from my previous posts that I believe the rearing of children is the responsibility of the parent(s). The root of the entire problem is that parents are more concerned with their own wants and needs, and how supposedly " happy" their children are than to recognize that their main role is not to make sure their children are happy, but to ensure that they mature into quality human beings, i.e. free-thinking individuals with a bit of consideration for and politeness toward others thrown in.

The role of the professor is to educate within their field of expertise. Period.

Despite what you want to argue about their relative maturity, the fact is that college students, in the VAST majority, are legally considered to be adults. Professors are bound by legislation like FOIP or FOIA (depending on the country), which means they have to treat students as adults and their relationship with students is not like that of a school teacher and a pupil.

Thank you for pointing out the completely obvious. Wow... just wow.

Professors are there to teach, not to hand-hold and offer pastoral care. Even if I care deeply about a student (okay, stop laughing all you guys who know how mean I am), it's not appropriate for me to leap in and hand hold. My job is to present the material, to challenge students to think about it and to get them to meet specific learning and technical standards.

Did you actually read anything I previously wrote?

Your idea that stupid jerks who just barely manage to grind out a PhD (omg I can hardly type that without laughing) can get jobs in the current climate is absolutely hilarious.

First, if you actually believe that there aren't fucktards out there that manage to attain a PhD, you're as pig-ignorant as they are. Second, do you honestly think that every school produces the same quality doctorate, or that all of them care about said quality? Silly.

Let me guess, all those professors with whom you built strong relationships gave you the grades you thought you deserved, but the ones who are stupid, and can only teach because they can't do, those ones were particularly thick-headed with regard to recognizing your brilliance.

O' Great Karnak, try again. Everyone recognizes my brilliance. The lowest grade I ever received on anything was ninety-two percent. In fact, that seems to be my magic, non-effort-making test score. My IQ is a documented 162, I was awarded a lifetime membership to the local MENSA chapter, I make an uber-delicious Jameson-based barbecue sauce, and write a mean haiku.

You cannot bait me
I rule, you drool, sugarlips...
but you keep trying


What are they?

The Children of the Damned.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kewian on 2009 June 11, 21:06:08
You are still a sheep and a noob. Therefore, you lose.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 11, 21:15:37
You are still a sheep and a noob. Therefore, you lose.

Oooooh, your dazzling retort stings. It's like a paper cut, even...


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 11, 21:49:11
teebs, if your IQ is 162 that puts you in the upper third of MATYzens. Just. And that's only because we have all the barely literate turds in the bottom third to even us out. Mensa membership doesn't even get you considered for a post in the Grammar Police, so good try waving your academic dick, but it is just a little tiddler.

I did read what you wrote, and for me it sounded just like every other undergrad who was doing okay and so assumed he or she knew everything there was to know about academia and being a prof.

I am quite sure there are a few crackpots, cheaters, users and sluts (who sleep with their profs) getting PhDs, but the proportion of actual morons doing so is going to be fairly small. Why? Because actual morons would have trouble writing a dissertation that gets passed by outside examiners. You conveniently glossed over my main point, though, which was that a moron with a PhD, even assuming such an animal exists, is highly unlikely to get a job in the current climate. Because actual bright competent people can't even manage that, a lot of the time. You only have to read the Chronicle of Higher Education or RYS for a couple days to figure that out.

You say "the role of the professor is to educate within their [sic] field of expertise. Period." Which statement you make apparently in an effort to go "case closed, so there," but in order TO educate within my field of expertise, I have to teach a bunch of skills like critical thinking, and analysis. If I don't teach students what to do with the material, how can I teach the material? If I don't give my students an understanding of feminism, how can they read Virginia Woolf? If I don't help them come to grips with modernism and colonialism, how can they read Heart of Darkness?

It's the same in nearly every discipline. There are theories and ideas underlying areas of study that may not be apparent to the average undergrad, and it is the professor's job to at least introduce students to these ideas. Good profs will challenge students' assumptions and make them think rather than spoonfeeding the material needed for the exam.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Kyna on 2009 June 12, 01:20:18
The role of the professor is to educate within their field of expertise. Period.

That is a very limiting view of the role of the professor.

I live in a city where there are 3 universities.  The city itself is quite small, so the universities compete quite aggressively each year to attract the interest of students and their parents.  All three of the universities run very similar advertising campaigns - they all advertise that they teach critical thinking and that their graduates are expert problem solvers with employable, transferable skills.

Professors aren't just teaching the subject matter (which is their field of expertise), they're also teaching how to analyse the material, as employers are far more interested in whether a graduate has analytical skills than on whether the graduate is an expert in a very narrow field, such as a thesis on outliers in data mining.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 12, 01:39:39
teebs, if your IQ is 162 that puts you in the upper third of MATYzens. Just. And that's only because we have all the barely literate turds in the bottom third to even us out. Mensa membership doesn't even get you considered for a post in the Grammar Police, so good try waving your academic dick, but it is just a little tiddler.

Out of the approximate 6500 members who post, there are over 2150 MATYans who fall into the top 99.99% intellectually? That is quite an achievement. Of course when I said "documented IQ" I didn't mean they received an email from free-iqtest.net.

I am well aware that I am not the most brilliant of the brilliant. I lost a chess match to a nine year old; rather than anger I experienced only awe and joy at witnessing a game played so masterfully. I have no ego to bruise. Try again.

I am quite sure there are a few crackpots, cheaters, users and sluts (who sleep with their profs) getting PhDs, but the proportion of actual morons doing so is going to be fairly small. Why? Because actual morons would have trouble writing a dissertation that gets passed by outside examiners. You conveniently glossed over my main point, though, which was that a moron with a PhD, even assuming such an animal exists, is highly unlikely to get a job in the current climate. Because actual bright competent people can't even manage that, a lot of the time. You only have to read the Chronicle of Higher Education or RYS for a couple days to figure that out.

I didn't gloss over anything. You may be right on that point, and as I already stated;
This isn't to say I believe that of all professors. In fact, I don't believe it to be the case with the majority, based on my own experience.

It doesn't change the fact that there are already morons with PhD's teaching in universities.

You say "the role of the professor is to educate within their [sic] field of expertise. Period." Which statement you make apparently in an effort to go "case closed, so there," but in order TO educate within my field of expertise, I have to teach a bunch of skills like critical thinking, and analysis. If I don't teach students what to do with the material, how can I teach the material? If I don't give my students an understanding of feminism, how can they read Virginia Woolf? If I don't help them come to grips with modernism and colonialism, how can they read Heart of Darkness?

Since critical thinking and analysis, as well as a working knowledge of modernism and colonialism were very likely required for you to attain your degree, wouldn't you say that falls under the purview of your field of expertise? Does this mean you are competent to teach colonial history or critical analysis of modernist art? Further, does it make you an expert on sociopolitical topics? Perhaps you are competent to teach these subjects, but if that is the case, I would argue that it is due to your intellect rather than your degree.

It's the same in nearly every discipline. There are theories and ideas underlying areas of study that may not be apparent to the average undergrad, and it is the professor's job to at least introduce students to these ideas. Good profs will challenge students' assumptions and make them think rather than spoonfeeding the material needed for the exam.

Again I would argue that the underlying theory and idea falls under the scope of the discipline. I agree that good professors should challenge their student's assumptions and make them think, but making them analyze the subject from all sides, whether it parallels one's own beliefs or not, is just as important. It is not the responsibility of the professor to develop a curriculum that insinuates his or her own belief system into the minds of a captive audience.

By the way, I really have no interest in joining the "Grammar Police." It takes up far too much of your time. 9266 posts in not quite four years. You've averaged nearly 7 posts EVERY DAY in that time. Thanks, but I have this thing called a "life" and I prefer to spend my days doing real life "stuff". In a month or so, I'm going to a place called "outside" and because it's a really big place, I'm going to drive my motorcycle all over it for about three months, or maybe six. I haven't decided just how long yet.

While I'm sure that logging on here and posting every single day for four years is not a signifier of a boring and tedious life, I am quite sure my need to do "stuff" and go "outside" in "real life" would seriously impede my performance as an "Officer of Grammatical Rules and Enforcement". So, as devastating as it is to discover that I am too stupid to qualify for such a sought after and vaunted position, I suppose I can and will carry on. It may require sandy beaches, a couple of bikini-clad tarts and a buttload (no, literally a buttload) of tequila, but I'm firm in my position that I will survive...

Professors aren't just teaching the subject matter (which is their field of expertise), they're also teaching how to analyse the material, as employers are far more interested in whether a graduate has analytical skills than on whether the graduate is an expert in a very narrow field, such as a thesis on outliers in data mining.

Point taken Kyna and hopefully addressed above.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Salomon on 2009 June 12, 02:34:52
I am well aware that I am not the most brilliant of the brilliant. I lost a chess match to a nine year old; rather than anger I experienced only awe and joy at witnessing a game played so masterfully. I have no ego to bruise. Try again.

I don't get this part, in chess strength is very well defined, and kids can get more easily to a decent level than adults, so, even if you were the most brilliant of the brilliant, an averagely trained 9 6 years old  is going to beat you at your first game, and probably continuously until you get more experience.

Chess ability is not necessarily tied to brilliancy either, see Alan Turing, a genius that developed the first computer algorithm, and hypothetical computation engines (now known as Turing Machines)* and first chess playing algorithm, yet he was really awful at chess.

*Part in italic copy-pasted.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 June 12, 03:37:34
Thanks, but I have this thing called a "life"

It's been my experience that when a person new to MATY posts something like this, they almost inevitably turn out to be a tard, probably because anyone who has the time to brag on an online forum about how they have a life does not really have a life. 

One person's balance and showing all sides of an issue is another person's "indoctrination."  This is why there is such strict protection for academic freedom on campus.  I am especially careful not to use my position as a bully pulpit.  I teach in a state school and generally I'm careful not even to reveal my religious or political affiliations.  But even teaching Renaissance literature, I'm bound to step on some toes.  Some people do not want to be exposed to readings in which any homoerotic desire is even possible:  in their view, Antonio suffers all the stuff he does for Bassanio because they are just Real Good Pals. You wouldn't think you could get into trouble by explaining about double predestination, but I've had students (in the nicest possible way) say to me that they were SURE Christians couldn't have believed anything like that in the sixteenth century because THEY were Christians and THEY didn't believe that.  (I pointed them, also in the nicest possible way, towards John Calvin.)

I am sure an angry student could transform that into my pushing a radical anti-Christian homosexual agenda on my students.  There are morons in all walks of life. And some of them run FrontPage.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 12, 03:40:57

I don't get this part, in chess strength is very well defined, and kids can get more easily to a decent level than adults, so, even if you were the most brilliant of the brilliant, an averagely trained 9 6 years old  is going to beat you at your first game, and probably continuously until you get more experience.

Chess ability is not necessarily tied to brilliancy either, see Alan Turing, a genius that developed the first computer algorithm, and hypothetical computation engines (now known as Turing Machines)* and first chess playing algorithm, yet he was really awful at chess.

*Part in italic copy-pasted.

I'm rather good at chess. He was far superior. We were not playing in an organized event and had no prior knowledge of one another as players. He is the son of a friend. We have played a number of times and I can count on one hand the times I've won. This is not really the salient point.

Many adults (particularly those with much higher than average IQs) find it difficult to have their intellect put into question by anyone, much less a child. While I admit a certain level of arrogance and therefore felt somewhat humbled, it was a most enjoyable surprise. One can question my intelligence all one wants. I am completely comfortable with who I am.

I disagree with your second statement. While there are types of brilliance not suited to chess, brilliance of some sort is required. Alan Turing was a genius, but in what context? Chess is far more than computation. Among other things chess requires strong spacial ability, planning and efficiency and an ability to quickly and accurately gauge one's opponent. Further, it takes years of commitment to achieve any sort of expertise at chess. It may take a combination of qualities to become a great player, but intellectual brilliance most certainly plays a part.

I'll readily admit that I know little beyond the basics about Alan Turing. Was he a dedicated chess player? Was he a spacial thinker?

Thank you, Basura, as well as everyone else for the stimulating discourse.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 12, 04:22:57
teebs, you are hilarious. You have posted more than 7 times today. Does this mean you, too, have no life?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 12, 04:47:16
teebs, you are hilarious. You have posted more than 7 times today. Does this mean you, too, have no life?

Dammit, rohina, stop trying to indoctrinate the noob to your no-life-having ways.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 12, 04:50:27
It's been my experience that when a person new to MATY posts something like this, they almost inevitably turn out to be a tard, probably because anyone who has the time to brag on an online forum about how they have a life does not really have a life.

My ten posts definitely suggest that I spend all of my time online.

One person's balance and showing all sides of an issue is another person's "indoctrination."  This is why there is such strict protection for academic freedom on campus.  I am especially careful not to use my position as a bully pulpit.  I teach in a state school and generally I'm careful not even to reveal my religious or political affiliations.  But even teaching Renaissance literature, I'm bound to step on some toes.  Some people do not want to be exposed to readings in which any homoerotic desire is even possible:  in their view, Antonio suffers all the stuff he does for Bassanio because they are just Real Good Pals. You wouldn't think you could get into trouble by explaining about double predestination, but I've had students (in the nicest possible way) say to me that they were SURE Christians couldn't have believed anything like that in the sixteenth century because THEY were Christians and THEY didn't believe that.  (I pointed them, also in the nicest possible way, towards John Calvin.)

Wait, wait, wait... they weren't just really good pals?

I applaud your efforts. From this and prior posts you seem to be an educated and articulate human being and very likely an excellent teacher. Can you deny that some professors do use their positions as bully pulpits? As to the first sentence of the above quote, to some extent that is true, but there is a limit. I've experienced first hand a tenured professor using her position to further her own sociopolitical agenda. I found it incredibly disturbing to watch her attempt to manipulate her students while the younger ones never batted an eye. Again, I realize professors like her are the exception and not the rule, and though I may not have articulated this fact, I have a tremendous amount of respect for anyone who dedicates themselves to teaching.

I am sure an angry student could transform that into my pushing a radical anti-Christian homosexual agenda on my students.  There are morons in all walks of life. And some of them run FrontPage.
What does Malaysian television programming have to do with the anything?

teebs, you are hilarious. You have posted more than 7 times today. Does this mean you, too, have no life?
Absolutely. At this very moment I'm in my tighty-whiteys, eating butter pecan frosting straight from the container and listening to Michael Bolton singing "A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes". I epic fail.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: lemmiwinks on 2009 June 12, 04:51:49
I may wish to join this "blue-collar elitist" cult. Where might I find more information about it?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 12, 05:00:05
I may wish to join this "blue-collar elitist" cult. Where might I find more information about it?

Get in your car, drive away from civilization, and look for a bar with peeling paint and a neon Budweiser logo in the front window.  There will be rusty pickup trucks outside, and at least one of them will have a dog tied up with baling twine in the bed.  There will be guns in the rear window, and probably at least one Confederate flag visible.  When you walk in the bar, it will smell like stale smoke, and there will be a spittoon somewhere.  The jukebox only plays country music.  Everything will be sticky.  The bartender is surly, and your beverage choices will be Budweiser, Miller, PBR, Busch, Jim Beam, and Jack Daniel's.  When you have found a place that meets these requirements, you will have found the blue-collar elitist cult.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 12, 05:04:07
I applaud your efforts. From this and prior posts you seem to be an educated and articulate human being and very likely an excellent teacher. Can you deny that some professors do use their positions as bully pulpits? As to the first sentence of the above quote, to some extent that is true, but there is a limit. I've experienced first hand a tenured professor using her position to further her own sociopolitical agenda. I found it incredibly disturbing to watch her attempt to manipulate her students while the younger ones never batted an eye. Again, I realize professors like her are the exception and not the rule, and though I may not have articulated this fact, I have a tremendous amount of respect for anyone who dedicates themselves to teaching.

I knew this was a case of individual butthurt. I bet she was an evil feminist, too, right?

@prof buttsecks: I once had a student write a paper about how, since people thought Shakespeare's sonnets were written to a male, it must have been his son, and so it was platonic, filial love.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MuertoElBarto on 2009 June 12, 05:05:28
I may wish to join this "blue-collar elitist" cult. Where might I find more information about it?

Or you could save youself the trip, and pick up an AutoTrader (there's a meeting posted in the classifieds).

I knew this was a case of individual butthurt. I bet she was an evil feminist, too, right?

Is there any other kind?

BTW, you've reached your 7-post limit for the day, Rohina.  Know when to say when, and all that.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 12, 05:19:22
Dammit, rohina, stop trying to indoctrinate the noob to your no-life-having ways.
I'm a nuuuuuuuube.

How do you kill that which has no life?

lemmiwinks, we're currently holding tent revivals at all major truck stops along I80, Piggly Wiggly food stores, and John Deere dealerships. You can also join up in our special prayer meeting this SUNDAY, SUNDAY, SUNDAY at Hagerstown Speedway, in Hagerstown MD. Don't forget to catch GRAVE DIGGER and the gargantuan destroyer from prehistory: ROBOSAURUS!!!

I'll pm you with the pertinent information.

rohina, keep on trying. I have no problems at all with feminism. In fact I like all kinds of people: feminists, homosexuals, lesbians, rednecks, crackers, politicians, truck drivers, people of all races and political and social backgrounds. Then, I even manage to find tolerance for insufferable prigs.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 June 12, 05:24:41
I applaud your efforts. From this and prior posts you seem to be an educated and articulate human being and very likely an excellent teacher. Can you deny that some professors do use their positions as bully pulpits? As to the first sentence of the above quote, to some extent that is true, but there is a limit. I've experienced first hand a tenured professor using her position to further her own sociopolitical agenda. I found it incredibly disturbing to watch her attempt to manipulate her students while the younger ones never batted an eye. Again, I realize professors like her are the exception and not the rule, and though I may not have articulated this fact, I have a tremendous amount of respect for anyone who dedicates themselves to teaching.

I knew this was a case of individual butthurt. I bet she was an evil feminist, too, right?

@prof buttsecks: I once had a student write a paper about how, since people thought Shakespeare's sonnets were written to a male, it must have been his son, and so it was platonic, filial love.

Oh God, don't even get me started on this kind of thing. I had someone in my tutorials first year of university that just freaked out completely and could NOT comprehend the idea of Mercrutio having a homoerotic man-crush on Romeo and actually stood up in the tute and shouted "NO! THEY WERE HOMIES! HE WAS INTO CHICKS!".


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 12, 05:27:08
I applaud your efforts. From this and prior posts you seem to be an educated and articulate human being and very likely an excellent teacher. Can you deny that some professors do use their positions as bully pulpits? As to the first sentence of the above quote, to some extent that is true, but there is a limit. I've experienced first hand a tenured professor using her position to further her own sociopolitical agenda. I found it incredibly disturbing to watch her attempt to manipulate her students while the younger ones never batted an eye. Again, I realize professors like her are the exception and not the rule, and though I may not have articulated this fact, I have a tremendous amount of respect for anyone who dedicates themselves to teaching.

I knew this was a case of individual butthurt. I bet she was an evil feminist, too, right?

@prof buttsecks: I once had a student write a paper about how, since people thought Shakespeare's sonnets were written to a male, it must have been his son, and so it was platonic, filial love.

Oh God, don't even get me started on this kind of thing. I had someone in my tutorials first year of university that just freaked out completely and could NOT comprehend the idea of Mercrutio having a homoerotic man-crush on Romeo and actually stood up in the tute and shouted "NO! THEY WERE HOMIES! HE WAS INTO CHICKS!".

Please.  Mercutio/Tybalt is totally the OTP there.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 12, 05:28:03
Kiki, that forced a full on laugh from the gut... priceless.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 June 12, 05:32:15
Kiki, that forced a full on laugh from the gut... priceless.

Do I know you? Do I LIKE you? No? I'm one of the horrid evil Buttists that agree with Rohina. I think you're a self-important douche-nozzle with a chip on your shoulder the size of lake michigan when it comes to female university professors. Go back to your ice-cream and eat your feelings again, tubby. I also found it amusing to see an "I have no ego" comment from someone that lists their email as "bigego69".


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: teebs on 2009 June 12, 05:39:20
Do I CARE? No. Can you offend me. Not likely. I am a self-important douche-nozzle. The chip is only the size of Lake Huron, get your facts straight. It was frosting, not ice cream. Oooooh, you called me "tubby." Ouch. I'm glad you find it amusing, that was the idea.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 12, 05:48:41
Please.  Mercutio/Tybalt is totally the OTP there.

I was going to be all "no wai!" but they really are a classic Top and Bottom when you think about it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 June 12, 06:00:35

Oh God, don't even get me started on this kind of thing. I had someone in my tutorials first year of university that just freaked out completely and could NOT comprehend the idea of Mercrutio having a homoerotic man-crush on Romeo and actually stood up in the tute and shouted "NO! THEY WERE HOMIES! HE WAS INTO CHICKS!".

Please.  Mercutio/Tybalt is totally the OTP there.

Well, they are in my Veronaville, anyway.  My school just did a production of it and there were interviews with the actors, in which they revealed their characters' deepest, darkest secret.  The actor playing Tybalt said his character was gay.  The actor playing Mercutio said his character was slowly dying of syphilis and that it had gone to his brain.  But in the play, I think the text does support Mercutio having a one-way mancrush on Romeo.  

Rohina:  which is the top and which is the bottom?  I always figured Tybalt as the top.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 12, 06:18:49
Mmm, I dunno.  Tybalt's the King of Cats, and cats aren't known for their high activity level, and Bottom strikes me as requiring less physical exertion.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 12, 06:30:35
Tybalt is def the top. Mercutio has that masochistic streak a mile wide.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Salomon on 2009 June 12, 09:03:56
I'm rather good at chess. He was far superior.

Do you have an official rating? No? Well, try to make a guess of what your chess rating is and subtract 400, that'll be close to your real rating unless you're bad at guessing. Usually a rating of 1000 is enough to beat all the people in your street, and all casual players of the park, making you believe that you're really good, yet a 1200 player is going to look far superior to you, but in reality both players are really weak.

We have played a number of times and I can count on one hand the times I've won.

The key is the number of times, have you played 100 games? Then you might have a point. Have you played 20 games? Then those results would indicate that he's not more than 400 points stronger than you, and so if he played on official tournaments he would probably not perform as good as you expect.

At rating below 1800 tactics are almost everything, and games are decided by blunders, so that if you make them, a player that spots your blunders and punishes them is going to be successful most of the time, even if he commits the same number or more blunders but you're incapable of noticing and punishing them. The point is that that's more about practice and experience than about brilliancy.

it was a most enjoyable surprise.

Ok, now go at the local chess club to play [non-casual] kids at chess and note how superior they are to you, you'll enjoy it.

Chess is far more than computation.

Chess is all about computation, the best chess programs in the world (e.g. Rybka) are just fast number crunchers that know what to compute, and are playing consistently at a level 200 rating points higher than the strongest human on his best day.

The analytic and positional aspects of the game only help to reach positions where it's easier to compute or it makes it more difficult to the opponent, or in where you reach complex positions you are familiar with. Chess is just like an incredibly more complex version of tic tac toe, in principle (a finite turn based 2 player game with open information) now tell me what else does tic tac toe need than computation.

"Strong spacial ability" helps in computation, you can't "plan" if you don't know what are going to be the opponent's moves, all you can do is guess by evaluation of best potential future moves and if you get them right (i.e. you're not missing the better move that the opponent plays) you get efficiency, that requires computation.

"Accurately gauging one's opponent" is a non-factor, on the board players have the same strenght than online players even though the latter don't get to see their opponent, would you gauge based on the fact that your online opponent is named bubsy336? And rating based strategy doesn't work, the best move on the board is the same regardless of opponent modeling, if you're willing to set up a trap in where, if the opponent doesn't fall on it you end on a worse position you're just playing poker. Sure, there are good chess players that might do this, but they're relying on luck, I've beaten "far superior" (rating based) opponents by just not falling on their traps and showing them "gauging" me isn't the way in chess.

It may take a combination of qualities to become a great player, but intellectual brilliance most certainly plays a part.

And again, there are many counter examples to this, do your research, besides the geniuses that failed really badly at chess (after really trying) there are examples of average intelligent people that were really good at chess (presumably by natural talent, but that talent was mainly for chess.)

Of course you need a certain level of intelligence for chess (if someone doesn't understand the rules he's never going to be world champion) but I wouldn't call that "brilliancy", it's mostly about patience, determination and having fun with the game, if it bores you it doesn't matter if you beat Einstein at physics, you're probably not going to play chess enough to beat that kid on your street.

I'll readily admit that I know little beyond the basics

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turning

That site has a couple of other interesting articles as well.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 June 12, 09:55:13
I applaud your efforts. From this and prior posts you seem to be an educated and articulate human being and very likely an excellent teacher. Can you deny that some professors do use their positions as bully pulpits? As to the first sentence of the above quote, to some extent that is true, but there is a limit. I've experienced first hand a tenured professor using her position to further her own sociopolitical agenda. I found it incredibly disturbing to watch her attempt to manipulate her students while the younger ones never batted an eye. Again, I realize professors like her are the exception and not the rule, and though I may not have articulated this fact, I have a tremendous amount of respect for anyone who dedicates themselves to teaching.

I knew this was a case of individual butthurt. I bet she was an evil feminist, too, right?

@prof buttsecks: I once had a student write a paper about how, since people thought Shakespeare's sonnets were written to a male, it must have been his son, and so it was platonic, filial love.

Oh God, don't even get me started on this kind of thing. I had someone in my tutorials first year of university that just freaked out completely and could NOT comprehend the idea of Mercrutio having a homoerotic man-crush on Romeo and actually stood up in the tute and shouted "NO! THEY WERE HOMIES! HE WAS INTO CHICKS!".

Oh dear, oh dear. Thank God I've not had to put up with nonsense like that, I'd most likely have punched the idiot. I did have a heated argument at A-Level with someone in my Lit class who insisted that homosexual readings of Shakespeare ruined the perfectly innocent notion of the "bro-mance" (he didn't call it that exactly, as I'm not sure the term had been coined then). That's about as close to such a debate as I've got. I guess I must be lucky to go to uni at a reasonably progressive place. Mind you, with resident experts in Queer theory, and modules like Early Modern Sexualities, anyone expecting nice heteronormative readings should really go elsewhere.

There are some lecturers who obviously have a bee in their bonnet about certain issues. I've yet to meet a female English professor who isn't strongly interested in feminism for instance. Perhaps that's because most of my lecturers were undergrads during the 70's and early 80's when feminism was all the rage. Or perhaps it's just because femenist readings of literature are particularly interesting. But if you're at a decent uni, then you should be intelligent enough to sift through the personal agendas of any professors and work out your own opinions. My A Level Economics teachers used to espouse their free-market capitalist ideologies virtually every lesson. Despite their concerted efforts they failed to indoctrinate me, and we were still wide-eyed 12s back then.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 June 12, 13:47:59
Do I know you? Do I LIKE you? No? I'm one of the horrid evil Buttists that agree with Rohina. I think you're a self-important douche-nozzle with a chip on your shoulder the size of lake michigan when it comes to female university professors. Go back to your ice-cream and eat your feelings again, tubby. I also found it amusing to see an "I have no ego" comment from someone that lists their email as "bigego69".

Even so, let's not lose sight of the fact that he claims to be able to make a decent barbecue sauce.  People are losing sight of the relevant facts of the case.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 12, 14:04:04
Tybalt is def the top. Mercutio has that masochistic streak a mile wide.

I love this. Mostly because I am immediately picturing John Leguizamo and Harold Perrineau (preferably in their ball costumes) getting all "let me take my sin back."


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kewian on 2009 June 12, 17:22:35
I may not be a genius or whatever this big mouthed sheep thinks it is but I do know enough that you don't jump into a new forum and make such a total ass out of yourself by being such a braggart.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 June 12, 18:55:34

/.../ with resident experts in Queer theory /.../.


Who did you have there? I'm curious because my degree is partially in gender theory and I had an awesome queer theorist as a professor for some of the courses. I'm wondering if it was someone I would recognize. :)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dstucki on 2009 June 12, 20:05:17
I may wish to join this "blue-collar elitist" cult. Where might I find more information about it?

Get in your car, drive away from civilization, and look for a bar with peeling paint and a neon Budweiser logo in the front window.  There will be rusty pickup trucks outside, and at least one of them will have a dog tied up with baling twine in the bed.  There will be guns in the rear window, and probably at least one Confederate flag visible.  When you walk in the bar, it will smell like stale smoke, and there will be a spittoon somewhere.  The jukebox only plays country music.  Everything will be sticky.  The bartender is surly, and your beverage choices will be Budweiser, Miller, PBR, Busch, Jim Beam, and Jack Daniel's.  When you have found a place that meets these requirements, you will have found the blue-collar elitist cult.

Oh my God. That is truly my vision of hell on earth.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 12, 20:08:42
I must be oblivious, because I was thinking Mercutio/Benvolio/Romeo when I read the play.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 June 12, 20:53:46
I must be oblivious, because I was thinking Mercutio/Benvolio/Romeo when I read the play.

Not so sure about Benvolio.  For one thing, when Romeo says "I love. . . a woman!" Benvolio says something like, "Well, DUH!"  For another, his solution to being dissed by one hot babe is another hot babe.  I can't decide if Benvolio is truly a clueless straight boy, or a straight boy who gets it, and I don't know if he understands the Romeo/Mercutio relationship, whatever that is. The only thing that's definite about Benvolio is his desire that everyone Get Along.

There are a lot of characters, like Bassanio in Merchant and Sebastian in Twelfth Night, who definitely seem to be the object of male desire.  (Side note:  if you are named Antonio and you are in a Shakespeare play, do not bother registering your flatware pattern at Macy's.  It ain't gonna happen.)  I can't always tell if they are bisexual and can or have returned that affection to some extent; if they are straight and clueless; if they are straight and generally clueful but have not dropped to the fact that their friends are in love with them; or if they are straight, clueful, and simply do not want to know that their friends are in love with them, as it would make things awkward.  Sebastian in Twelfth Night, in particular, acts confused--"So. . .why are you giving me your whole wallet?"  "You're in danger of arrest here?  Why the hell didn't you tell me?"  "Gee, I wish I could find good old Tony.  He might have some good advice for me about this girl I just met."  But I think the text could support any of those readings.  What it's nearly impossible to do is ignore the passion on either Antonio's side: "But come what may, I do adore thee so,/That danger shall seem sport, and I will go."


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 12, 21:27:03
Benvolio is a conformer, so no way is he gay. He is all about people abiding by the rules, which manifests in wanting them to get along, but his motivation is his desire not to rock the boat.

Shakespeare's gayness to me always seems like youthful experimentation; like those guys who are confused are willing to be convinced to try it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TheQuietOne on 2009 June 13, 00:07:24
There is already more than enough mediocrity in this world, where the stupid breed without surcease, and the intellectually superior worry about overpopulation and don't breed at all.

Interesting choice of words. The whole superior/inferior thing sounds a bit familliar, don't you think? So, how many intellectually inferior people do you propose to sterilize in order to make this world a smart enough place for you to enjoy it?
Really, Onkel Mengele would be so proud.

Higher education is NOT for everyone. Why is it that "leveling the playing field" invariably means making it easier for the stupid ones?

Define stupid and hold your breath. Exhale. Go slap yourself in front of a mirror. Repeat.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 13, 01:33:24
There is already more than enough mediocrity in this world, where the stupid breed without surcease, and the intellectually superior worry about overpopulation and don't breed at all.

Interesting choice of words. The whole superior/inferior thing sounds a bit familliar, don't you think? So, how many intellectually inferior people do you propose to sterilize in order to make this world a smart enough place for you to enjoy it?
Really, Onkel Mengele would be so proud.

To say nothing of the idea that intelligent children can only be born from intelligent parents with college degrees, and that intelligent parents are only capable of raising intelligent offspring.  That would come as a great surprise to the blue-collar parents I know with smart kids, and smart parents whose kids have learning disabilities...


Is anyone else thinking Prospero/Caliban?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 13, 01:36:07
Is anyone else thinking Prospero/Caliban?

NO! But Stephano and Trinculo with Caliban in a drunken 3-way? Maybe.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 13, 02:04:32
Is anyone else thinking Prospero/Caliban?

NO! But Stephano and Trinculo with Caliban in a drunken 3-way? Maybe.

Mmmm, yes, that's much better.

Prospero/Ariel, then?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 13, 02:25:15
I don't think Ariel has parts.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 13, 02:33:56
Prospero was stuck on that island for YEARS.  He HAD to be shagging something.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 June 13, 03:17:50
Is anyone else thinking Prospero/Caliban?

All the speculation I've read has been more along the lines of Prospero/Sycorax, which would make Prospero Caliban's stepfather, or perhaps even his father.  This makes Caliban's later attempt to rape his "sister" Miranda extra-squicky, but it's plenty squicky without it.  Miranda and Caliban have grown up side by side as though they were brother and sister, and rape of teenaged girls is just . . . no.

I've seen productions where the director tried to create some kind of hot n' heavy stuff with Ariel and Prospero, but I think that's ignoring something basic about Ariel.  For me, one of the best lines in the play is when Ariel says that Prospero would feel pity if he could see his former enemies:

Ariel:  . . . if you now beheld them, your affections
Would become tender.

Prospero:                   Dost thou think so, spirit?

Ariel: Mine would, sir, were I human.

That line isn't effective if Ariel is human in any way.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 13, 03:39:18
Wasn't Sycorax dead at the beginning of the play?  Prospero had to be there for at least a little while with nothing to bone.

Tad Williams did a nice retelling of The Tempest from Caliban's point of view.  The book's called Caliban's Hour and it's pretty hard to find, but it's a quick read.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zaphod Beeblebrox on 2009 June 13, 21:24:05
To say nothing of the idea that intelligent children can only be born from intelligent parents with college degrees, and that intelligent parents are only capable of raising intelligent offspring.  That would come as a great surprise to the blue-collar parents I know with smart kids, and smart parents whose kids have learning disabilities...

Yes, thank you.  Both my husband and I could be considered super geniuses (I've been told my number; whoop-dee-fucking-doo), but every one of our children has a learning disability (one more severely than the other two, as well).  Also, my oldest brother and I are the "book smart" children, while I have another older brother who is a goddamn idiot.  We're all the product of an inbred moronic mother (gah, embarrassing, yet true) and a father whose IQ was tested as 115 back in the '50s but is surely higher than that.

Edumacated parents =/= edumacated children.  Thank you, faulty genetics.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 13, 23:30:43
I wouldn't say that a learning disability is the opposite of intelligence. What about savants?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 14, 00:13:58
Well, except intelligence is no use except to LEARN NEW THINGS. If you are smart but can't learn, you are pretty much a fish with a bicycle.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 14, 00:14:57
A lot of the time, savantism comes at the expense of normal functioning elsewhere in the brain.  Autistic savants might be able to draw something perfectly from memory or calculate days of the week from the introduction of the current calendar system, but they have deficits in emotional understanding and communication.  People who are otherwise normal-functioning, but have a gift in one area, like Beethoven or Mozart, aren't equally gifted everywhere.  Often, music and mathematical ability are intertwined, but those people will probably NOT have the same skill with other things.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 June 14, 01:04:41
Well, except intelligence is no use except to LEARN NEW THINGS. If you are smart but can't learn, you are pretty much a fish with a bicycle.

Not bad.  My son, for example, is great with spatial stuff, has skills of an artist like anything, but lacks focus in school and social skills.

The fish is good at what fishes are good at, but has trouble with bicycles, yes.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 June 15, 10:50:06
I wouldn't say that a learning disability is the opposite of intelligence. What about savants?
People with learning disabilities are not intelligent. Savantism is not equivalent to intelligence at all. Intelligence is the ability to learn and adapt to arbitrary conditions. Being a savant just makes you a fleshy robotic machine, no different than a computer. A computer can perform complex mathematics faster than any meatbag. A computer can regurgitate enormous amounts of information with flawless accuracy. A computer cannot beat a 6 year old child in Civilization. Computers are stupid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 15, 15:59:09
I wouldn't say that a learning disability is the opposite of intelligence. What about savants?
People with learning disabilities are not intelligent. Savantism is not equivalent to intelligence at all. Intelligence is the ability to learn and adapt to arbitrary conditions. Being a savant just makes you a fleshy robotic machine, no different than a computer. A computer can perform complex mathematics faster than any meatbag. A computer can regurgitate enormous amounts of information with flawless accuracy. A computer cannot beat a 6 year old child in Civilization. Computers are stupid.

That makes more sense. I think I was mixing savantism up with something else in my head.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 15, 21:25:40
Well, "learning disability" doesn't necessarily mean the inability to learn, just the inability to learn in the specific environments that people are generally expected to learn in.  This is why there are often attempts to educate learning-disabled kids in other environments.  What that actually says about their universal, environmentally-independent level of intelligence probably depends on a lot of other factors.  I don't think we even have a way to measure environmentally-independent intelligence, and they are unlikely to get very far in the standard school system in any case, so I'm not sure it really makes much difference.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 15, 22:48:03
Inability to learn in specific environments is still inability to use intelligence. If you can only learn in a padded room with flashing lights, then you are pretty screwed unless the entire world is rearranged to take account for your speshulness. I know there's a movement in edumacation to do exactly that. However, this kind of idea of "accomodations" is seriously fucking up a bunch of learning disabled students, because it is designed to delude them into thinking their disability doesn't exist.

Look at it this way: if you only have one arm and one eye and you say you want to be a neurosurgeon, is it reasonable for people to say to you "absolutely, you can totally do that" or would they be better off suggesting that you do something where hand-eye co-ordination is less vital?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dramamine on 2009 June 15, 23:08:09
Inability to learn in specific environments is still inability to use intelligence. If you can only learn in a padded room with flashing lights, then you are pretty screwed unless the entire world is rearranged to take account for your speshulness. I know there's a movement in edumacation to do exactly that. However, this kind of idea of "accomodations" is seriously fucking up a bunch of learning disabled students, because it is designed to delude them into thinking their disability doesn't exist.

Look at it this way: if you only have one arm and one eye and you say you want to be a neurosurgeon, is it reasonable for people to say to you "absolutely, you can totally do that" or would they be better off suggesting that you do something where hand-eye co-ordination is less vital?

I was typing up something quite similar, but you worded it a lot better than I.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 15, 23:35:26
Inability to learn in specific environments is still inability to use intelligence. If you can only learn in a padded room with flashing lights, then you are pretty screwed unless the entire world is rearranged to take account for your speshulness. I know there's a movement in edumacation to do exactly that. However, this kind of idea of "accomodations" is seriously fucking up a bunch of learning disabled students, because it is designed to delude them into thinking their disability doesn't exist.

The problem is that "learning disability" is very general - it can refer to people with dyslexia, or people with mild to severe autism, or people with mental retardation, or probably any number of other things.  All they have in common is that they have more trouble that usual learning in the environment they're expected to learn in.  Some of them can be fixed with minor changes to environment, some of them can be fixed by taking certain drugs, some people do fine if they have someone else take notes for them, and some of them probably can't be fixed at all.  I've never been diagnosed with a learning disability, but I have had problems with certain teachers to the extent where it was impossible to actually get any benefit out of the class because the teacher decided to take some kind of vendetta out on me.  This was easily fixed by my transferring to a different class.  Most people I've met with "learning disabilities" had remarkably similar problems with learning - some superficial aspect of the class they were in made it impossible for them to learn, and they simply transferred to a slightly different classroom or a slightly different teacher or employed different strategies for taking notes/doing homework/etc. or took some mild-strength drug to help them focus and the problem was more or less solved.  I don't think the vast majority of these cases are about accommodating people with serious mental deficiencies, but about having teachers show some creativity and flexibility to actually help their students learn.

Actually, when I was 18 and relatively clueless about this sort of thing, I was under the impression that learning disabilities didn't exist.  I was told off by various people with learning disabilities who had done some of the things I listed above.  Clearly, these measures don't put anyone under the impression that their problems don't exist.  I'm sure a lot of non-learning-disabled people will have trouble learning in situations that others would not, as well - it's just that since they never had to try learning in those environments, this disability was never recorded.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 15, 23:57:55
The problem is that "learning disability" is very general - it can refer to people with dyslexia, or people with mild to severe autism, or people with mental retardation, or probably any number of other things.  All they have in common is that they have more trouble that usual learning in the environment they're expected to learn in.  Some of them can be fixed with minor changes to environment, some of them can be fixed by taking certain drugs, some people do fine if they have someone else take notes for them, and some of them probably can't be fixed at all.  I've never been diagnosed with a learning disability, but I have had problems with certain teachers to the extent where it was impossible to actually get any benefit out of the class because the teacher decided to take some kind of vendetta out on me. 

Dude, this is a result of your personality disability, not a learning disability.

This was easily fixed by my transferring to a different class.  Most people I've met with "learning disabilities" had remarkably similar problems with learning - some superficial aspect of the class they were in made it impossible for them to learn, and they simply transferred to a slightly different classroom or a slightly different teacher or employed different strategies for taking notes/doing homework/etc. or took some mild-strength drug to help them focus and the problem was more or less solved.  I don't think the vast majority of these cases are about accommodating people with serious mental deficiencies, but about having teachers show some creativity and flexibility to actually help their students learn.

Well, one person's creativity and flexibility is another person's having educational standards. I deal with learning disabled students all the time, and a lot of the ones with alphabet disorders have this idea that I should redesign my courses to suit them. Occasionally, I get the talk from them about how my assignments, which are designed according to specific pedagogical principles to be open-ended and require critical and analytical thinking, are counter to their disability, because the way they learn requires detailed and specific instructions. Now, to me, the ability to work out how you are going to approach the task is absolutely the student's responsibility. I will HELP, but I am not going to set all that out for you, because I am teaching you how to do it yourself.

I have met with disability support people, and they always say, "oh, yes, the student has to work this out, and we will help them develop a plan of attack" but the students themselves often bitch and whine about it, and talk about how "my other professor" spoon feeds instructions: "wipe nose, get out pencil, find a piece of paper". So I am skeptical about how much of this is related to disability and how much to intellectual laziness.

I once had a learning disabled student who was in my class, and was a whiny bitch. She came back 2 years later to do another class after having been in the workplace, and her attitude was totally different. She would come to me with plans of what she was going to do, and ask me for my input, instead of complaining, she actually had strategies for getting the work done. When I commented on how much better she was doing, she said something to effect of, it is amazing what you find out you can do when you are getting your ass kicked in the real world.

My point here is, there's a difference between working to overcome your issues and expecting everyone else to stoop to your level.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 16, 00:08:26
Dude, this is a result of your personality disability, not a learning disability.

Which is why I prefaced that by saying that I don't have a learning disability, though I don't think I was the only person with a "personality disability" in that instance.

Quote
I have met with disability support people, and they always say, "oh, yes, the student has to work this out, and we will help them develop a plan of attack" but the students themselves often bitch and whine about it, and talk about how "my other professor" spoon feeds instructions: "wipe nose, get out pencil, find a piece of paper". So I am skeptical about how much of this is related to disability and how much to intellectual laziness.

So, some of your students are lazy.  They are obviously not damaged beyond the ability to learn anything, and nobody is forcing you to completely redesign your courses to accommodate them, or trying to convince you (or your students) that the learning disabilities do not exist and the sole responsibility of the teacher to deal with.  I don't see whatever vast speshul learning disability bureaucratic conspiracy you think you're up against here.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 June 16, 00:47:38
Learning Disabled does not equal stupid.  The opposite is actually often true.  True LD people have average to exceptional IQs.  That being said, I do agree with Rohina's statement:

"Inability to learn in specific environments is still inability to use intelligence. If you can only learn in a padded room with flashing lights, then you are pretty screwed unless the entire world is rearranged to take account for your speshulness. I know there's a movement in edumacation to do exactly that. However, this kind of idea of "accomodations" is seriously fucking up a bunch of learning disabled students, because it is designed to delude them into thinking their disability doesn't exist."

There are a number of examples of exceptionally talented, accomplished people who are LD.  They are those who think outside the norm,  figure out what and how they need to learn, and end up owning the world.  The edumacators who make excuses and tell the students that it's okay that they don't know something are doing a terrible disservice to everyone.  The "LD" students are no longer held accountable, so they no longer try to figure out things on their own.  When they go out into the "real world," they are going to find out first hand that the accommodations aren't so accommodating.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 16, 01:11:31
The edumacators who make excuses and tell the students that it's okay that they don't know something are doing a terrible disservice to everyone.  The "LD" students are no longer held accountable, so they no longer try to figure out things on their own. 

See, I keep hearing about all of these horrible horrible OMG terrible conspiracies to protect learning-disabled kids in a bubble and not requiring them to actually think, but have never actually encountered them anywhere except in blanket statements on message boards.  It's like how Communism/Socialized Medicine/Dirty Mexicans/Neoconservative Jews are somehow taking over America, except that rohina isn't American, so the madness has clearly invaded Australia as well.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 16, 01:15:51
So, some of your students are lazy.  They are obviously not damaged beyond the ability to learn anything, and nobody is forcing you to completely redesign your courses to accommodate them, or trying to convince you (or your students) that the learning disabilities do not exist and the sole responsibility of the teacher to deal with.  I don't see whatever vast speshul learning disability bureaucratic conspiracy you think you're up against here.

I never said I was. The only conspiracy in this thread is the one in your head which automagically reads everything I write as "ROHINA IS THE ANTICHRIST" in your feeble little brain. Go away, the adults were having a conversation.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 June 16, 01:20:08
The problem is that "learning disability" is very general - it can refer to people with dyslexia, or people with mild to severe autism, or people with mental retardation, or probably any number of other things.  All they have in common is that they have more trouble that usual learning in the environment they're expected to learn in.
Yeah, well, the inability to learn in ANY environment is a sign that YOU ARE STUPID. For instance, some people have difficulty learning under conditions which involve flying shrapnel, bullets, and nearby explosions. While certainly not ideal conditions for study, you should still be capable of learning under these conditions if you have a brain at all. Some people simply cannot. We have a word for them: DEAD.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 16, 01:29:42
I never said I was.

So what did you mean what you said this?

I know there's a movement in edumacation to do exactly that. However, this kind of idea of "accomodations" is seriously fucking up a bunch of learning disabled students, because it is designed to delude them into thinking their disability doesn't exist.

Yeah, well, the inability to learn in ANY environment is a sign that YOU ARE STUPID.

Sure.  My point was that "learning-disabled" simply means that you have trouble learning in whatever specific environment they first tried to teach you in, and not that you are incapable of learning in any environment whatsoever.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 June 16, 01:55:14
See, I keep hearing about all of these horrible horrible OMG terrible conspiracies to protect learning-disabled kids in a bubble and not requiring them to actually think, but have never actually encountered them anywhere except in blanket statements on message boards.  It's like how Communism/Socialized Medicine/Dirty Mexicans/Neoconservative Jews are somehow taking over America, except that rohina isn't American, so the madness has clearly invaded Australia as well.
[/quote]

NIFL (National Institute for Literacy) estimates that up to 80% of high school drop outs are LD.  As an ABE/GED educator, I find those numbers are greatly exaggerated.  Those numbers, generated from just that one source should indicate something.  Empirical evidence shows the most common issue is behavior/self-control in the younger drop-outs, whereas in the older students, the most likely reason for dropping-out was to take care of responsibilities.  Yes, of course there actually are some students who are diagnosed LD, but they are the ones who are coming back just to prove to themselves they can, after achieving what they intended.

As for Rohina not being American - she is from an English-speaking, western civilization, and as an academian (sp), is probably more informed about the educational trends that go on in the US than most people IN the educational system.

The problem is that "learning disability" is very general - it can refer to people with dyslexia, or people with mild to severe autism, or people with mental retardation, or probably any number of other things.  All they have in common is that they have more trouble that usual learning in the environment they're expected to learn in.
Yeah, well, the inability to learn in ANY environment is a sign that YOU ARE STUPID. For instance, some people have difficulty learning under conditions which involve flying shrapnel, bullets, and nearby explosions. While certainly not ideal conditions for study, you should still be capable of learning under these conditions if you have a brain at all. Some people simply cannot. We have a word for them: DEAD.

LD does not include anyone with mental retardation.  That is covered under mental retardation (or some subcategory). 

I think shrapnel and bullets would induce FASTER learning! (or death.).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 16, 02:08:34
Empirical evidence shows the most common issue is behavior/self-control in the younger drop-outs, whereas in the older students, the most likely reason for dropping-out was to take care of responsibilities.  Yes, of course there actually are some students who are diagnosed LD, but they are the ones who are coming back just to prove to themselves they can, after achieving what they intended.

Not saying you're wrong, but what does "empirical evidence" mean to you?  Personal experiences with your specific students?  Anecdotes from friends?  Actual data from an organization you trust more?  Which one?

Quote
Rohina

I call her rohina because that is what she chose to call herself.  If she wants me to capitalize her name, she can go into her profile and change it.  If you want to take up this issue with rohina herself, be my guest.

Quote
she is from an English-speaking, western civilization, and as an academian (sp), is probably more informed about the educational trends that go on in the US than most people IN the educational system.

I am not saying she doesn't.  In fact, I am asking for her to give her Official Academic Opinion (tm) on this subject, with supporting sources of course.

Also, "(sp)" is the same thing as saying "I care about appearing educated but I'm too fucking lazy to actually look up the spellings of words."  Fail.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 June 16, 02:44:17
Not saying you're wrong, but what does "empirical evidence" mean to you?  Personal experiences with your specific students?  Anecdotes from friends?  Actual data from an organization you trust more?  Which one?

I really should have included that the information was based on my experience and interaction with my students.  You know, the HUMAN interaction with other humans, where I actually meet, observe, interact, assess, teach, talk, celebrate... As opposed to a questionnaire built to build statistics.

Quote
I am not saying she doesn't.  In fact, I am asking for her to give her Official Academic Opinion (tm) on this subject, with supporting sources of course.

Why?

Quote
Also, "(sp)" is the same thing as saying "I care about appearing educated but I'm too fucking lazy to actually look up the spellings of words."  Fail.

Actually, it's spelled absolutely correct.  Did you check?  I wasn't happy with the specific application of the word in this case.  A "member of an academy, university or college" could refer to just about anyone.  And frankly, brain-fartage came in the way of thinking of a more applicable term. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 16, 02:56:02
I really should have included that the information was based on my experience and interaction with my students.  You know, the HUMAN interaction with other humans, where I actually meet, observe, interact, assess, teach, talk, celebrate... As opposed to a questionnaire built to build statistics.

What makes you think your class is an appropriate sample of the entire country?  What makes you think that the organization did not actually talk to real people?  Do you have any explanation of how these results might have been produced if they were not in fact correct?  Your personal experiences are probably relevant to the discussion, but using them to "disprove" the findings of an actual scientific study is bullshit.

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I am not saying she doesn't.  In fact, I am asking for her to give her Official Academic Opinion (tm) on this subject, with supporting sources of course.
Why?

Because I want to see her actually back up her blanket statement with something of substance?

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Actually, it's spelled absolutely correct.  Did you check? 

It doesn't matter if it's spelled correctly, and it doesn't matter if I checked your spelling for you.  The fact that you found it necessary to put "(sp)" in your post means that you didn't check your spelling even though you were unsure.  Either that, or you don't know what "(sp)" means.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dramamine on 2009 June 16, 03:13:21
The edumacators who make excuses and tell the students that it's okay that they don't know something are doing a terrible disservice to everyone.  The "LD" students are no longer held accountable, so they no longer try to figure out things on their own. 

See, I keep hearing about all of these horrible horrible OMG terrible conspiracies to protect learning-disabled kids in a bubble and not requiring them to actually think, but have never actually encountered them anywhere except in blanket statements on message boards.  It's like how Communism/Socialized Medicine/Dirty Mexicans/Neoconservative Jews are somehow taking over America, except that rohina isn't American, so the madness has clearly invaded Australia as well.

You may not have personally encountered these bubble kids, but I was forced into a peer based tutoring program for LD kids in the American public school I went to.

None of the kids I was assigned to had any ability to think for themselves. They were within a year of my age at the time and they behaved like children 3 to 5 years younger. They all suffered from self-entitlement and outstandingly huge egos from the years of ass wiping in the LD classes and/or by their medication dispensers/doctors. At the end of the program, I was the one held accountable for their failures (what the shit, I was 12!) and they were told "It's not your fault she failed you. She must have a teaching disability." and were ushered off onto the next year of LD studies. No accountabiliy and no reprocussions for failure, regardless of how or why they failed. The program even went so far as to give me a negative modifier to my Civics grade, causing my Honor Roll status to be removed.

Just as a note to my post, I'm not backing any particular side of this discussion, but I wanted to say that I had seen such children in my personal experience. As you stated, rufio, personal experiences are probably relevant to the discussion. Consider this as my personal experience added to the discussion and in no way is it an attempt to disprove anything.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 June 16, 03:18:36
What makes you think your class is an appropriate sample of the entire country?  What makes you think that the organization did not actually talk to real people?  Do you have any explanation of how these results might have been produced if they were not in fact correct?  Your personal experiences are probably relevant to the discussion, but using them to "disprove" the findings of an actual scientific study is bullshit.

Obviously, you have absolutely no idea what and/or how statistical data is generated.  Questions are asked, yes.  Interaction, however, is extremely limited. 

I never used the word "disprove", hence my use of empirical evidence to explain my reasoning.

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I am not saying she doesn't.  In fact, I am asking for her to give her Official Academic Opinion (tm) on this subject, with supporting sources of course.
Why?[/quote]

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Because I want to see her actually back up her blanket statement with something of substance?
Again, why?  Isn't her experience enough?  You, who thinks that LD is included in mental retardism?  You are asking for substance?

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It doesn't matter if it's spelled correctly, and it doesn't matter if I checked your spelling for you.  The fact that you found it necessary to put "(sp)" in your post means that you didn't check your spelling even though you were unsure.  Either that, or you don't know what "(sp)" means.
  I can help you with reading comprehension. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 June 16, 03:25:04
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You may not have personally encountered these bubble kids, but I was forced into a peer based tutoring program for LD kids in the American public school I went to.

None of the kids I was assigned to had any ability to think for themselves. They were within a year of my age at the time and they behaved like children 3 to 5 years younger. They all suffered from self-entitlement and outstandingly huge egos from the years of ass wiping in the LD classes and/or by their medication dispensers/doctors. At the end of the program, I was the one held accountable for their failures (what the shit, I was 12!) and they were told "It's not your fault she failed you. She must have a teaching disability." and were ushered off onto the next year of LD studies. No accountabiliy and no reprocussions for failure, regardless of how or why they failed. The program even went so far as to give me a negative modifier to my Civics grade, causing my Honor Roll status to be removed.

Just as a note to my post, I'm not backing any particular side of this discussion, but I wanted to say that I had seen such children in my personal experience. As you stated, rufio, personal experiences are probably relevant to the discussion. Consider this as my personal experience added to the discussion and in no way is it an attempt to disprove anything.

What you are describing doesn't sound like LD.  That sounds more like emotionally disturbed. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 June 16, 03:26:56
Sure.  My point was that "learning-disabled" simply means that you have trouble learning in whatever specific environment they first tried to teach you in, and not that you are incapable of learning in any environment whatsoever.
I argue that some kids simply have a problem learning in environments that don't contain enough beatings. Solution: More beatings!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 16, 03:39:02
maurie, double-posting is somewhat taboo here.  Edit your first post to include the text of the second.

Obviously, you have absolutely no idea what and/or how statistical data is generated.  Questions are asked, yes.  Interaction, however, is extremely limited.

I know how statistical surveys are conducted.  I don't think it's an especially enlightening procedure myself, but this seems like a fairly straightforward question - it's fairly easy to determine whether someone dropped out of school, and probably also fairly easy to determine if they have been diagnosed with a LD.  The possible answers for both questions are "yes" or "no".  There isn't a gray area to confuse things.  Of course, this data itself does not go into why every single one of them dropped out, but it shows what they wanted to show (apparently) - that LD kids are getting shaft from somewhere.

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I never used the word "disprove", hence my use of empirical evidence to explain my reasoning.

Sorry if I misunderstood you, but it seemed like you were saying that the study's results were wrong and then giving your personal experience as a refutation.

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Again, why?  Isn't her experience enough?

I don't have any particular faith in rohina's experience, no.  Please to be doing a search of Retardo Land before jumping into the middle of preexisting fights.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dramamine on 2009 June 16, 04:11:06
What you are describing doesn't sound like LD.  That sounds more like emotionally disturbed.

Reflecting upon that craptastic time, the students could have very well have been emotionally disturbed. However, to my knowledge then and now, I know that there were some children who were LD who weren't exactly as I described. A majority of the ones I encountered during that time were. A few even managed to enter the same high school I attended and participated in regular classes... but with a lot of accomidations. Such as no homework and very little accountability for classwork. That high school didn't have a seperate department/set of teachers to assist LD children, so the entire class had to deal with their accomidations.

That was the main reason why I dropped out of that high school. I was sick of class being dumbed down to an astounding degree and being treated as a troublemaker when I asked questions that made the others think.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 16, 04:16:58
I never said I was.

So what did you mean what you said this?

I know there's a movement in edumacation to do exactly that. However, this kind of idea of "accomodations" is seriously fucking up a bunch of learning disabled students, because it is designed to delude them into thinking their disability doesn't exist.

I meant exactly what I said. It's not a conspiracy, it's a misguided educational approach. I don't think there's any mystery about it, however wrongheaded I think it is. Students with learning disabilities are being encouraged to think that they can do whatever they want, to the point where my office mate got a student in his class who seriously could not write a sentence, but who wanted to be an English major so she could be a writer. Her language and cognitive disabilities were so severe that she was never going to be able to pass a Grade 12 equivalent English class, but teaching aide after teaching aide had passed her along, giving her the idea that not being able to write a simple sentence (and we are talking "the cat sat on the mat") was not going to hold her back.

Oh, and I see from subsequent posts that you have decided that I am making all this stuff up. Well, there's a shock. If there's any information you don't like, just dismiss it out of hand.

@maurie and others who are less insane than rufio: my experiences are anecdotal, but they come from 8 years teaching in a post-secondary institution in Canada. I have at least 1 LD student every semester, and I think my peak was a glorious 12 one semester when I was teaching a class they are all drawn to like bees to honey.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 16, 05:35:15
Students with learning disabilities are being encouraged to think that they can do whatever they want, to the point where my office mate got a student in his class who seriously could not write a sentence, but who wanted to be an English major so she could be a writer. Her language and cognitive disabilities were so severe that she was never going to be able to pass a Grade 12 equivalent English class, but teaching aide after teaching aide had passed her along, giving her the idea that not being able to write a simple sentence (and we are talking "the cat sat on the mat") was not going to hold her back.

Well, that's just dumb administration.  It sounds like what they would do with Algebra and Geometry at my high school - someone decided that everyone must take Geometry in 10th grade, even if you'd failed Algebra in 9th grade and therefore had no real background to properly learn the Geometry.  That's not just a problem with LD kids.

BTW, what were her language disabilities?  Was it specific to writing, or was she just not able to form grammatical sentences at all?

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Oh, and I see from subsequent posts that you have decided that I am making all this stuff up. Well, there's a shock. If there's any information you don't like, just dismiss it out of hand.

I did not decide you were "just making all this stuff up".  I am just sick of hearing you go on about things like this that I have never personally seen happen or even heard about from anyone not on a message board, without one single anecdote to show what you're talking about or one single guess at what might actually be happening to cause it.  If I have to attack you to find out WTF you are talking about, so be it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 16, 06:02:04
Guh, more reading failure. No one was MAKING this person take English. They were encouraging her, merely because she had expressed an interest in it, and in spite of a bunch of issues that made it pretty much contra-indicated. If my blind person had insisted on majoring in Art History, do you think that is something she should have been encouraged to do? Or at some point, does someone need to say, "Uh, dude, if you can't see the paintings, it is going to be a bit difficult for you to write essays about them"?

What the hell is your argument, now? That my experience is nothing but anecdotal? Possibly, except I have had discussions with other academics about similar situations. Oh, but you don't believe me when I say that? Because really, your argument, based on nothing, is that you have decided I am bad at my job?

What is your evidence to support your position? That you had some teachers who had trouble putting up with your shit? How is that valid, if you are dismissing everyone else's personal experience?

As far as your "I am sick of you saying things outside my experience", well, I am sorry your experiences are so limited. Have you asked an educator about these issues? I mean, if you are complaining that you haven't encountered these opinions elsewhere, I have to ask if you have put yourself in the way of encountering them. MATY is full of people I wouldn't meet AFK. It's one of the things I like about this place, actually, since meeting retired mercenaries who live in bunkers is not something that would normally happened to my sheltered, Ivory Tower, self. Meeting entitled assholes who think they are smarter than they are is something I have no shortage of in my workaday life, though.

If you are now dismissing arguments people are making here because they are making them here, I have to ask wtf you think you are going to accomplish. Maybe you should go have a lie down.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 16, 06:31:52
No one was MAKING this person take English. They were encouraging her, merely because she had expressed an interest in it, and in spite of a bunch of issues that made it pretty much contra-indicated.

Ah, see, you mentioned grade 12, so I thought this was high school.  Maybe you should be a little more clear.  If it's college, though, I can actually understand it - she's paying them money to take certain classes, and I can see them getting worried about lawsuits and crap if they tell her, "You don't have the mental ability to major in English" or something to that effect.  Idiotic?  Sure, but I'm not sure there's anything that can be done about it.  Passing people randomly because they want to be writers is not something I have ever heard of before, though.  Unless this is something totally different and you have once again failed to communicate what you mean. 

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What the hell is your argument, now? That my experience is nothing but anecdotal?

I think you need some help with reading comprehension.  My point was that I see you whining about this all the time and wanted to know what, specifically you were whining about, and since asking you simple questions doesn't seem to work, this is my only option to get you to tell me something real.

I asked you another question too, which I'm actually interested in hearing the answer to, but once again you have completely ignored it in favor of venting your spleen.  I guess I will have to attack you on your abilities to analyze and identify language disorders among your students in order to get an answer to that one.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 June 16, 13:00:30
I think you need some help with reading comprehension.  My point was that I see you whining about this all the time and wanted to know what, specifically you were whining about, and since asking you simple questions doesn't seem to work, this is my only option to get you to tell me something real.

Not sure I understand this.  See, she did actually tell the story of her office mate, who had a student with a learning disability who wanted to be an English major, but couldn't write a sentence, and yet was being passed along, likely to her detriment...

Seems slightly more than merely anecdotal to me.

I asked you another question too, which I'm actually interested in hearing the answer to, but once again you have completely ignored it in favor of venting your spleen. 

Yes, perhaps, but you invite people to vent spleens.  In fact, if this was a desirable skill, you could become rich running spleen venting therapy sessions.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 16, 13:23:03
No one was MAKING this person take English. They were encouraging her, merely because she had expressed an interest in it, and in spite of a bunch of issues that made it pretty much contra-indicated.

Ah, see, you mentioned grade 12, so I thought this was high school. 

Do you even READ what people write? It was directed at YOU for fuck's sake.

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I meant exactly what I said. It's not a conspiracy, it's a misguided educational approach. I don't think there's any mystery about it, however wrongheaded I think it is. Students with learning disabilities are being encouraged to think that they can do whatever they want, to the point where my office mate got a student in his class who seriously could not write a sentence, but who wanted to be an English major so she could be a writer. Her language and cognitive disabilities were so severe that she was never going to be able to pass a Grade 12 equivalent English class, but teaching aide after teaching aide had passed her along, giving her the idea that not being able to write a simple sentence (and we are talking "the cat sat on the mat") was not going to hold her back.

If you are not going to READ, then stop fucking arguing. No one else had a problem understanding what rohina meant there. Reading comprehension failure.

So... rake in face, or are you the new fingers-in-ears?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 16, 14:24:55
I said "Grade 12 equivalent" and "my office mate" who, oddly enough, also teaches in the same department at the same post-secondary institution. rufio, as usual, embodies that saying about assuming stuff. Do everyone a favour and go back and read the words in all my posts on this subject, in order, rather than your usual method of reading one word in 3 and then guessing the rest according to your rubric "rohina sucks and makes stuff up and I don't like her talking about things I haven't personally experienced because everything she says is supposed to be about me".

Look, rufio, I wasn't "whining" about anything. I was offering a comment on my experiences with students with Learning Disabilities. I don't know why you have a bug up your butt about my doing that, but apparently you do. I made it clear that I am speaking from personal and reported experiences, and what the scope of those experiences is. I offered an example of one of my students, and one of a colleague's. What is it, exactly that you have the problem with? Because it seems like your problem is "rohina expressed an opinion". The solution to this problem is for you to GTFO.

And to answer your question about what the student's specific disorder was, my response is "AH HA HA HA HA, you poor naive little rabbit." At this level, students are protected by FOIP and don't have to SAY what their disabilities are. At least, not to lowly beings like profs. We just have to accomodate the disability, not know what it is.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 16, 14:31:02
I think it's fairly safe to say that rufio doesn't read other's people posts. She scans them for something she can nitpick and argue semantics on, and harps on it for ages to show off her intellimagence. Failing to see that, by not taking the time to properly read, she just makes herself look like a head peen waggling idiot.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 June 16, 15:21:43
My father was a 7th-8th grade teacher for fifteen years. He had a lot of LD students in his classes and he was required to adjust his classes accordingly. He had 30-40 students in each class, he had to challenge the bright kids, make it easy on the LD/Tards, keep the average kids happy, teach toward everyones individual learning style, and couldn't fail anyone. He had to do all of that without modifying his curriculum in any way (easier homework for the LD/Tards, harder work for the bright kids, etc). I honestly don't know how he did it. There is a lot of pressure on teachers to individualize their classes, while treating every child the same.

My brother and I were both diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder while we were in college. Instead of encouraging us to learn appropriate coping skills, my parents immediately petitioned my college to "help" my brother.  He has always had trouble with standardized tests that required bubbling in the answer on a separate sheet. He would frequently bubble two answers on one line, skip lines, etc. They wanted him to be allowed to have extra time on the exams and have someone to bubble in his answers for him, and possibly take notes for him.  ::) They wanted me to be allowed to have extra time on exams as well, but I told them that I didn't need extra time (I was always the first or second student to finish).

The school refused, they claimed that they didn't have any sort of program set up to deal with learning disabilities and they were not going to set one up. My parents were pissed and threatened to sue. I think the only thing that stopped them was lack of money.

Both my brother and I ended up dropping out of school not too long after that. When I went back to school my parents suggested that I go to the Disability Support Services department at my school and get help. I refused, because I don't need help. It's a struggle to stay on task but I have learned how to cope, without medication, and how to be successful in spite of my "disability". My brother, if he does ever go back to school, will probably ask for help because he believes that he needs it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: psikfreak on 2009 June 16, 17:13:46




Further, today's children are 'horrible' because their parents are to self-absorbed and incompetent to raise a child. Society makes excuses for those children, e.g. they come from underprivileged homes, etc. And finally because people like you wash their hands of them. It's so much easier than tackling a problem that you haven't created but could remedy.


Look again.


* Going back to lurk mode*

Why thank you Captain Obvious for proving the point I made in the very same post. Which, had you read it for the novel concept of 'content' you would have *hopefully* comprehended that part.

I can't speak for other areas of the world, however it has been my experience in our wonderful public education system here in the USA that it is now 'politically incorrect' and 'offensive' to call individuals with mental deficits 'retarded' or 'mentally retarded'. As a result of the pansy-ass hand-holding, heaven-forbid-we-'offend'-anyone-by-stating-the-truth attitude children who are retarded/mentally retarded are referred to as having 'learning delays/disabilities'.

Which is asinine, but may explain a bit of the confusion.

Now, correct me if I'm wrong, but every child grows up to be an adult who is expected to function to the best of their ability in the society which they live. Ignorance, stupidity, and deciding to not remedy either or learn on a conscious/subconscious level not being a sufficient reason for failing to function to the best of their ability. Then isn't taking children with actual learning delays/disabilities out of mainstream learning situations doing them a gross disservice? After they've somehow matriculated into adulthood how are they going to, for instance, gain employment? Take Rohina's padded room and flashing light scenario. What *average* employer is going to create a speshul room for an employee in an average position so that they can learn/function on the job?

Yay for public edumacation. It managed to identify the child's speshulness and adapt to it thereby hindering the child's ability to function in society as an adult!

It's like how Communism/Socialized Medicine/Dirty Mexicans/Neoconservative Jews are somehow taking over America, except that rohina isn't American, so the madness has clearly invaded Australia as well.

Oh, no. We're still totally a society of capitalistic democracy over here. Our current president just happens to believe in a federally organized and maintained compulsory health care system. That the top 10% should have to pay more in taxes because they have the temerity to earn more that the herd of shepul who pass for your average American these days. Let's not forget part of that process is the federal government determining whom is in said 10%, how much more they should have to pay, and taking it from them to fund 'social programs' to benefit the shepul. No, no, that does not sound at all like 'from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs'.

If memory serves, and please correct me here if I'm wrong Rohina, Australia runs on the same schooling system as England. Therefore, when she said 'grade 12 equivalent' she meant first year of university there/fourth year of secondary school in the US.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dramamine on 2009 June 16, 19:50:45
I can't speak for other areas of the world, however it has been my experience in our wonderful public education system here in the USA that it is now 'politically incorrect' and 'offensive' to call individuals with mental deficits 'retarded' or 'mentally retarded'. As a result of the pansy-ass hand-holding, heaven-forbid-we-'offend'-anyone-by-stating-the-truth attitude children who are retarded/mentally retarded are referred to as having 'learning delays/disabilities'.

When I read this, I was reminded about some commercial I saw about an awareness program to stop calling retarded people retarded. It had some goofy acronym for it. If I can find it or remember what it was called, I'll edit this post. It was just amazing when you watched it. It was so politically correct, you wanted to vomit.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 16, 19:51:19
I don't know why you all assume I am in Australia. I have said several times where I am.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 16, 19:55:38
I don't know why you all assume I am in Australia. I have said several times where I am.

N00b making an assumption based on what RUFIO wrote. Big surprise there. rufio read that you USED to live in Australia, but only read the "live in Australia" part of the sentence and FAILED to notice the "used to."

Are we surprised?



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 June 16, 20:53:14
When I read this, I was reminded about some commercial I saw about an awareness program to stop calling retarded people retarded.

We have discussed this awareness program here at MATY already. The consensus seemed to be that our Tards are altogether worse and well deserving of their Trashcans, scorn, Tard status and special titles, unlike those mentally retarded people / small-L 'tards out there who had the misfortune to be born that way but who can be pleasant to be around even if dim; and, also, This Is MATY, We Are Not Politically Correct, Take Your Butthurt Elsewhere.

If you have an interest in that sort of thing, the Search box will help you find the original discussion about this.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: dramamine on 2009 June 16, 21:16:05
We have discussed this awareness program here at MATY already. The consensus seemed to be that our Tards are altogether worse and well deserving of their Trashcans, scorn, Tard status and special titles, unlike those mentally retarded people / small-L 'tards out there who had the misfortune to be born that way but who can be pleasant to be around even if dim; and, also, This Is MATY, We Are Not Politically Correct, Take Your Butthurt Elsewhere.

If you have an interest in that sort of thing, the Search box will help you find the original discussion about this.

Ah, I apologize. I hadn't considered that this particular commercial would have been brought up here and discussed in length. I had picked up on that the Tard titles and such weren't being used in a fashion to bash those who are actually mentally retarded. Also, I enjoy the fact MATY isn't politically correct and encourages people to think. I appreciate the guidance, Lorelei, and thank you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TheQuietOne on 2009 June 16, 23:07:40
It's interesting to see that opinion on special treatment of children with different levels of ability is so inconsistent. Accommodating needs of children with LD is seen as society pampering them, at the same time catering to the needs of advanced students is seen as a duty of educational system.

Everyone deserves a fulfilled and dignified life. That is all. If we can provide help, than by all means let's do it. And if by trying to help people lead a better life we reshape the society a bit, than all the better. A norm is a norm till it's not.
 
There is, after all, a thing called solidarity, n'est pas?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 June 16, 23:43:44
It's interesting to see that opinion on special treatment of children with different levels of ability is so inconsistent. Accommodating needs of children with LD is seen as society pampering them, at the same time catering to the needs of advanced students is seen as a duty of educational system.

I believe the point is that the "accommodations" that are being used to help "level the playing field" are inconsistent, impractical, and ineffective.  What is actually being observed is that the LD students are being passed along without being able to perform the tasks required to advance to the next level.  These "accommodations" are consuming time, effort, space, and financial resources that could otherwise be used to benefit those who are capable of learning and performing at the determined successful levels.  I don't believe anyone, especially an educator, would want another to go without education.  The argument is  having realistic goals as opposed to encouraging someone with no spatial ability that they can successfully walk a tight-rope.

What is this "caterng to the needs of advanced students" to which you refer?  I have never experienced any "catering" to an individual who works hard or has an innate ability to learn; the benefits they derive is completely earned.  In my experience, the needs of those who are advanced are neglected and ignored in order to accommodate those who need more help. 

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Everyone deserves a fulfilled and dignified life. That is all. If we can provide help, than by all means let's do it. And if by trying to help people lead a better life we reshape the society a bit, than all the better. A norm is a norm till it's not.
 
There is, after all, a thing called solidarity, n'est pas?

I wholeheartedly disagree with this statement.  No one "deserves" anything unless he or she has earned it.  I will give my all of my efforts to help someone who is working hard to achieve his goals.  I will not, however, do the same for someone who thinks she is entitled to what I have earned, just because she breathes.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 01:03:43
Not sure I understand this.  See, she did actually tell the story of her office mate, who had a student with a learning disability who wanted to be an English major, but couldn't write a sentence, and yet was being passed along, likely to her detriment...

Yes, after I harassed her about it.

I offered an example of one of my students, and one of a colleague's.

Thank you.

Quote
And to answer your question about what the student's specific disorder was, my response is "AH HA HA HA HA, you poor naive little rabbit." At this level, students are protected by FOIP and don't have to SAY what their disabilities are. At least, not to lowly beings like profs. We just have to accomodate the disability, not know what it is.

Surely you can be more specific than "unable to write a simple sentence."

Taking my sister out to dinner, BRB.  I'll get to the rest later.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 01:11:33
It's interesting to see that opinion on special treatment of children with different levels of ability is so inconsistent. Accommodating needs of children with LD is seen as society pampering them, at the same time catering to the needs of advanced students is seen as a duty of educational system.

The issue here is that the playing field is not level, and that the needs of the advanced students are ignored in favour of those who are struggling. The most common example of this occurring is that brighter students are often required to mentor or tutor slower ones; this is seen as a solution to the problem of disparate abilities in the classroom, but effectively it only benefits the child being tutored, while the tutor is as bored and unchallenged by the material as he/she was previously.

@stupio, I gave an example well before you started charging around with your headpeen, actually. I gave the second one in response to a series of comments from other people, so don't act like you are somehow the saviour of debate.

With regard to the student who was not my student; no I can't be more specific. I saw one piece of her written work, which was basically a mess of unrelated words. The rest of the situation I knew about because my colleague discussed it with me. We have, oddly enough, a collegial atmosphere, where faculty discuss students and pedagogy with one another. No doubt you have some huge objection to this that you will drag out in your next response.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MuertoElBarto on 2009 June 17, 01:25:47
With regard to the student who was not my student; no I can't be more specific. I saw one piece of her written work, which was basically a mess of unrelated words. The rest of the situation I knew about because my colleague discussed it with me. We have, oddly enough, a collegial atmosphere, where faculty discuss students and pedagogy with one another. No doubt you have some huge objection to this that you will drag out in your next response.

I suspect you were meant to answer with something more specific, so that your qualifications to make such a diagnosis could then be questioned.

I wish I had thought to insist on special treatment during my stellar four  5 1/2 years as an undergrad, as I am ambition-impaired, and my professors did nothing to accomodate my condition.

Edit: strikethrough doesn't play well with the number 4.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 01:28:09
I wish I had thought to insist on special treatment during my stellar 4  5 1/2 years as an undergrad, as I am ambition-impaired, and my professors did nothing to accomodate my condition.

Yeah, you totally missed a chance there. My best student ever was the one this semester who went totally off on me for not accommodating her disability, even though she hadn't actually gotten around to requesting accommodations at that point.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 June 17, 01:46:39
Eh, even when you accommodate, they still whine that you didn't bend over quite far enough.  I had a girl who got mono halfway through the semester, extended the deadline for the third paper until the night before grades were due, and she gave me a paragraph and asked if she could have more time.  Uh, NO, grades are due at noon.  It took you three weeks to write this paragraph, so I won't hold my breath for a miracle.  Or you sit down and go through the paper with them line-by-line because they actually showed up during your office hours, which at least shows some initiative, and when they get the final paper back, they accuse you of hating them and wanting them to fail because you didn't rubber-stamp it with an A, and dislike the reply of, "I told you what to fix and how to do it; I have no control over whether or not you actually did it, and did it right."

And then there was this guy.  I'm not sure how he survived long enough to get into my class.  In the past, he probably would have been left for the wolves or sacrificed to the thunder god or something.
The assignment was to describe a meal in objective terms.  It was supposed to be 1-2 pages.  This is what he turned in:
"It is Thursday night or what my friends like to call "poker night" at their apartment.  It is midnight and after four hours of drinking beer and playing cards one of my friends mentions ordering food.  Even though the idea of food had not crossed my mind because of the focus on cards as soon as it is mentioned I immediately start to crave wings.  Me and a few of my friends call an order and minutes later the doorbell rings and the wings are here.  I smell the very framiliar and comforting smell of honey barbecue sauce which I have grown accustomed too after a few years at UMASS and many late nights out such as this one.  It smells similar to a sweetened form of ketchup.  My Friends and I open them and all conversations and focus from anything else end as we are all fixated by the food.  The strong smell of the sauce fills the room with the slight smell of the few pieces of celery from the box.  With the smell of beer and alcohohol still dwindling among us all smelling of wheat and yeast."

Oh yes.  It really is that bad.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jack Rudd on 2009 June 17, 02:03:24
Oh, no. We're still totally a society of capitalistic democracy over here. Our current president just happens to believe in a federally organized and maintained compulsory health care system. That the top 10% should have to pay more in taxes because they have the temerity to earn more that the herd of shepul who pass for your average American these days. Let's not forget part of that process is the federal government determining whom is in said 10%, how much more they should have to pay, and taking it from them to fund 'social programs' to benefit the shepul. No, no, that does not sound at all like 'from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs'.
It sounds like the National Health Service in the United Kingdom. In the recent local and European elections, the party that dominated the United Kingdom was the Conservative party, a mostly socially-conservative, economically right-wing, establishment-supporting party. Despite its right-wing credentials, the Conservative party wouldn't dream of trying to abolish the NHS; that would be seen as electoral suicide over here. Socialism? You guys aren't even close.

(As a side note, I am told that the UK government actually pays less per person on health care than the US government does. Make of that what you will.)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 02:59:57
To clarify my earlier assumptions that it was a high school - I made that assumption because I didn't realize there was any fucking way that something like this could happen in an actual college.  If it's true, I am as appalled as you are.  My best guess (given what you've told me) is that they simply want her tuition money, and they don't get it if they let her fail.  So they sell her a diploma that isn't worth the paper it's printed on.  Capitalism at its best.  ::)

N00b making an assumption based on what RUFIO wrote. Big surprise there. rufio read that you USED to live in Australia, but only read the "live in Australia" part of the sentence and FAILED to notice the "used to."

I haven't read this entire thread, but rohina has told me in the past that she did live in Australia, and that was what I was going by.  I don't recall her stating where she lived in this discussion so far.  If she did, then yes, I must have missed it.  Right now I don't have the leisure to spend a lot of time reading internet forums.  My apologies.

With regard to the student who was not my student; no I can't be more specific. I saw one piece of her written work, which was basically a mess of unrelated words. The rest of the situation I knew about because my colleague discussed it with me.

Ahh, so you never personally heard her speak, or anything like that?  Sounds like a syntax issue though.  My asking wasn't anything to do with you, by the way - I was just curious, since I am actually interested in this stuff, unlike you (apparently).  I don't know much about language-related LDs, so I certainly wasn't going to question whatever you came up with, but I learned about some stroke-induced language disabilities a few semesters ago and found it pretty fascinating.  New wrinkles in the brain, and all that.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 03:34:42
To clarify my earlier assumptions that it was a high school - I made that assumption because I didn't realize there was any fucking way that something like this could happen in an actual college.  If it's true, I am as appalled as you are.  My best guess (given what you've told me) is that they simply want her tuition money, and they don't get it if they let her fail.  So they sell her a diploma that isn't worth the paper it's printed on.  Capitalism at its best.  ::)

So you admit that you don't really read what I post, but just make up stuff in your head about my motives and the truthfulness of my statements? Awesome.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 03:44:20
If you make a blanket statement that contains no actual information that looks just like a mindless rant about Communism/whatever the fad is now, yes, I am going to be skeptical until you actually back it up with something that looks genuine.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 June 17, 03:52:00
Communism WOT? What are you even talking about, rufio?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 04:00:05
If you make a blanket statement that contains no actual information that looks just like a mindless rant about Communism/whatever the fad is now, yes, I am going to be skeptical until you actually back it up with something that looks genuine.

CITATION NEEDED. Where is this "mindless statement"?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 04:08:36
Who's having trouble with reading comprehension now? (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php/topic,15068.msg442848.html#msg442848)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 June 17, 04:11:47
Who's having trouble with reading comprehension now? (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php/topic,15068.msg442848.html#msg442848)

Apparently I am having trouble with reading comprehension. I see no mindless rant about Communism/whatever the fad in that post. Non-standard reading comprehension FTL.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Kyna on 2009 June 17, 04:12:52
Who's having trouble with reading comprehension now? (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php/topic,15068.msg442848.html#msg442848)

You must have linked to the wrong post, because I don't see any "mindless rant about Communism/whatever the fad is now" in that post.  Perhaps the post you thought you read exists only in your head?

EDIT: ninja'd by jesslla.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 04:32:59
I'm sorry if you have trouble understanding the purpose of a simile.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 June 17, 04:42:07
Guh, more reading failure. No one was MAKING this person take English. They were encouraging her, merely because she had expressed an interest in it, and in spite of a bunch of issues that made it pretty much contra-indicated. If my blind person had insisted on majoring in Art History, do you think that is something she should have been encouraged to do? Or at some point, does someone need to say, "Uh, dude, if you can't see the paintings, it is going to be a bit difficult for you to write essays about them"?

Wouldn't that depend upon what kind of blindness your student had, and how profoundly blind he or she was, and why he or she wanted to take Art History?  There are blind artists.  I even recently heard of an exhibition entirely made up of the work of blind photographers.  Most of these people were "legally blind":  they could still see, but needed a lot of help.  In fact, one said that he used a camera as a sight aide:  he took photographs of things and *then* he could see them.  Blindness and Arts  (http://www.blindnessandarts.com/institutions.htm)

I'd want to be very careful before I ruled an entire field of knowledge off-limits to everyone with a certain disability. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 June 17, 04:52:20
To clarify my earlier assumptions that it was a high school - I made that assumption because I didn't realize there was any fucking way that something like this could happen in an actual college.  If it's true, I am as appalled as you are.  My best guess (given what you've told me) is that they simply want her tuition money, and they don't get it if they let her fail.  So they sell her a diploma that isn't worth the paper it's printed on.  Capitalism at its best.  ::)
A suitemate of mine my sophomore year was a similar situation. She had some sort of emotional disability, developmental delay I'd guess, and the critical thinking of a 6. She was a freshman and I couldn't believe that she'd been admitted to my college, which was sub-ivy but private, quite expensive, and difficult to get into. Come to find out, she was the daughter of a major donor. She had tutoring, summer sessions, an aide in class...and for what? What would her joke of an education get her that daddy's money wouldn't play a bigger part in?

In high school, my school moved towards inclusion. I wasn't in gifted talented at the time because I was sick of not being with some of my friends and I didn't see the point to AP. Well, except for Bio & Physics. The inclusion students had a wide range of disabilities and really most of them weren't any sort of problem. There were two, though, who I dreaded having in class because they would ask so many questions and we'd waste so much time in class going over the same thing twenty times for them. It was boring and aggravating, and didn't exactly move me to want to interact with them socially.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 05:31:19
I'd want to be very careful before I ruled an entire field of knowledge off-limits to everyone with a certain disability. 

To clarify: I was thinking of a student who was very, very blind (not just legally blind), writing those essays where you analyse the composition and details in a given painting.

My point is that I do feel like there is a resistance to telling disabled students that they suck at stuff, which is still something "normal" students will get from time to time. I don't see it as purely negative, either; it's life advice, like I was given when I was kind of caving to parental pressure to do Law, and someone (a mentor) said "you are going to be really bad at it and end up hating it, and these are the reasons why." That was, in some ways, a difficult conversation, but I appreciated it. If we are prevented from having those kinds of conversations with people with disabilities, is that really a good thing?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 June 17, 05:53:18
I'd want to be very careful before I ruled an entire field of knowledge off-limits to everyone with a certain disability. 

To clarify: I was thinking of a student who was very, very blind (not just legally blind), writing those essays where you analyse the composition and details in a given painting.

My point is that I do feel like there is a resistance to telling disabled students that they suck at stuff, which is still something "normal" students will get from time to time. I don't see it as purely negative, either; it's life advice, like I was given when I was kind of caving to parental pressure to do Law, and someone (a mentor) said "you are going to be really bad at it and end up hating it, and these are the reasons why." That was, in some ways, a difficult conversation, but I appreciated it. If we are prevented from having those kinds of conversations with people with disabilities, is that really a good thing?

I think there's a subtle difference.  For example:  it's very nice for lots of people to study music.  Very, very few ought to be encouraged to pursue it as a profession.  I didn't enjoy it when a voice teacher opined that I would not ever develop the voice to sing opera.  It may even have been true that my "real" voice wasn't going to come in until much later (she said this when I was twenty, and darker voices do develop late.)  I still think it wasn't bad for her to say that, because it forced me to re-evaluate, and ultimately, I don't have the right temperament for it.  A real future opera singer would have said "So?  I SPIT me of your opinion."  I wasn't disabled.  I just didn't have a truly magnificent voice, and it's really stupid to try to be an opera singer without a truly magnificent voice.  And no one really wants to say to anyone, "um, your voice?  Nice.  Not great." 

Someone who truly wants to do something extraordinary is going to move heaven and earth to do it.  Someone in a wheelchair who wants to do ballet will sneer at obstacles and work without sleep for a decade until she has put together the Wheelchairinas and the media is doing breathless stories about it.  That's not anything like watering a discipline down. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 June 17, 05:54:15
I am having difficulty picturing La Butt as a lawyer.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rosess on 2009 June 17, 06:15:41
Wouldn't that depend upon what kind of blindness your student had, and how profoundly blind he or she was, and why he or she wanted to take Art History?  There are blind artists.  I even recently heard of an exhibition entirely made up of the work of blind photographers.  Most of these people were "legally blind":  they could still see, but needed a lot of help.  In fact, one said that he used a camera as a sight aide:  he took photographs of things and *then* he could see them.  Blindness and Arts  (http://www.blindnessandarts.com/institutions.htm)

I'd want to be very careful before I ruled an entire field of knowledge off-limits to everyone with a certain disability.  

Part of my job was once to make musical performances relevant for deaf students.  It's actually rather fascinating to pull apart all the facets of music other than the actual tonal experience and see that it's still an interesting subject.  We went into visual representations of rhythm, experiencing the effect of sound waves by holding a balloon, demonstrating the mathematical relationships between notes with vibrating rubber bands, etc.  I'm not quite sure the bureaucracy was as helpful... having to hire a sign-language interpreter for a 100% musical performance is just a fancy way to give the translator's arms a rest and create a ton of questions about why that person sitting on the edge of the stage never did anything.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 17, 13:27:56

N00b making an assumption based on what RUFIO wrote. Big surprise there. rufio read that you USED to live in Australia, but only read the "live in Australia" part of the sentence and FAILED to notice the "used to."

I haven't read this entire thread, but rohina has told me in the past that she did live in Australia, and that was what I was going by.  I don't recall her stating where she lived in this discussion so far.  If she did, then yes, I must have missed it.  Right now I don't have the leisure to spend a lot of time reading internet forums.  My apologies.

You are so stupid it hurts sometimes. The fact that you remember rohina telling you at some point that she DID live in Australia means that you were present for a conversation in which she used the past fucking tense.

People don't use the past tense if it is still true. Common sense would dictate that by using past tense to describe where she lived, it means SHE DOESN'T LIVE THERE ANYMORE. So, if you don't know where she lives NOW (and considering that you never read anything anyone says, I'm not surprised you don't know) then don't ever say anything about where she lives.

It makes you look stupid when you base an argument off of where she lives to dismiss her point and you have it WRONG.

Trust me, you don't need anymore help looking retarded.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 June 17, 13:35:33
And you know you're stupid when even the Jelly agrees you are stupid. Even the Fs think you are stupid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 17, 13:43:00
Is everyone SURE that rufio isn't an ExtraSpeshulBear sock?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 13:56:46
Naw, the Bear wasn't quite as pigheadedly stupid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 June 17, 14:00:44
Yes, ExtraSpeshulBear has been disappointingly boring lately, in my view.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 17, 14:13:41
Naw, the Bear wasn't quite as pigheadedly stupid.


The faulty logic and inability to listen or comprehend is all too eerily similar though.

Yes, ExtraSpeshulBear has been disappointingly boring lately, in my view.

I am counting this as a win.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: MaximilianPS on 2009 June 17, 19:53:04
i've made a post on the official forum that probably is full-filled of grammar error.. at the i'm me  ;D

actually i can't find a correct place where post this stuff, so maybe this the correct one 'cause the dancing grammar style  ::)

about this thread (http://forum.thesims3.com/jforum/posts/list/34737.page#262430) that probably EAxis will censor, so before they censor me, i wish to save my post  ::)
Quote
i agree.. with LOLInAHat
the sims (v3) are ugly and unpleasant !
they looks like a bad version of the characters that come with poser(tm)
they aren't photorealistic, but they aren't cartoon style .. they looks just bad!

they aren't emotive* (i hope the translation is correct) like sims v2
To have a really emotional sim, take the player to some comic situation, that sims 3 totally miss it.
A Sit-Com is based on the exasperation of some situations, that take the watcher to have some funny moments, but the sims (v3) didn't slap no one, if they pee on his pants didn't cry, gealosly didn't take to any situation or reaction !!!
If a sim loose the job didn't cry, didn't be hungry, nothing !
They haven't any kind of emotion, this game is completely FLAT !

I think that someone loose the way, this game is totally boring, nothing happen, and the fact that thay so ugly is the top of the bottom.

what the hell did you do to my fav. game !!!?!? .. i think i hate you now !


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 20:22:28
Why are you interrupting our fight with your nonsense?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 17, 20:51:37
i've made a post on the official forum that probably is full-filled of grammar error.. at the i'm me  ;D

actually i can't find a correct place where post this stuff, so maybe this the correct one 'cause the dancing grammar style  ::)

about this thread (http://forum.thesims3.com/jforum/posts/list/34737.page#262430) that probably EAxis will censor, so before they censor me, i wish to save my post  ::)

Start > All Programs > Accessories > Notepad.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 22:41:40
You are so stupid it hurts sometimes. The fact that you remember rohina telling you at some point that she DID live in Australia means that you were present for a conversation in which she used the past fucking tense.

In fact, she used the present tense, which you would have understood if you knew anything about how tenses work in reported speech.  Since you are clearly having trouble, let me rephrase:

rohina said (in the past), "I live (in the present time of the past utterance) in Australia." = rohina said (in the past) that she lived (in the same past time) in Australia.

Contrast:
rohina said (in the past), "I lived (in the past time before the past utterance) in Australia." = rohina said (in the past) that she had lived (in the more remote past) in Australia.

Is that clear enough for you?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 22:47:10
Dude, given that I have been living in Canada the whole time I have been a member of MATY, you are talking out of your ass again. QUOTE THE POST or it didn't happen.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 22:49:05
Maybe I'm misremembering, then.  I probably got confused by all your butthurt about me referring to you as Canadian, or something.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 22:52:40
So, that would be your third admission in this thread that you don't really pay attention to what you read. Can we just go ahead and conclude that you have some kind of comprehension disability?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 23:10:02
A disability where I don't remember everything about everyone I meet online?  Sure.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 17, 23:28:53
Well, it's more than that, isn't it? Because you didn't just say "I don't recall". You asserted, several times, something which I said was not the case, accusing me of lying about my circumstances, and when challenged, you then made up evidence, presumably because you couldn't find evidence to support your assertion because there wasn't any.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 17, 23:44:05
As I said, I was mistaken - I didn't remember exactly what you said.

accusing me of lying about my circumstances,

Where?

Quote
you then made up evidence,

Where?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 18, 00:14:27
Accusations of lying:

True.  I was mostly thinking of major time-commitments or costs to the teacher/professor, since that seems to be where rohina is coming from here, but that probably adds up too, especially if she gets as many LD students as she claims.

I don't have any particular faith in rohina's experience, no.


Completely made-up bullshit:

You are so stupid it hurts sometimes. The fact that you remember rohina telling you at some point that she DID live in Australia means that you were present for a conversation in which she used the past fucking tense.

In fact, she used the present tense, which you would have understood if you knew anything about how tenses work in reported speech.  Since you are clearly having trouble, let me rephrase:

rohina said (in the past), "I live (in the present time of the past utterance) in Australia." = rohina said (in the past) that she lived (in the same past time) in Australia.

Contrast:
rohina said (in the past), "I lived (in the past time before the past utterance) in Australia." = rohina said (in the past) that she had lived (in the more remote past) in Australia.

Is that clear enough for you?

More bullshit (which also includes an implication of lying), which people have already called you on, since you have short-term memory problems and can't remember this happened a page ago:

If you make a blanket statement that contains no actual information that looks just like a mindless rant about Communism/whatever the fad is now, yes, I am going to be skeptical until you actually back it up with something that looks genuine.

Those are just the most recent ones.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 June 18, 00:22:08
Again, I think you are just seeing what your persecution complex wants to see.  Before I'm going to trust your experience as a professor, I want to actually hear some specifics (which you gave).  Something that looks like a baseless rant is going to continue to look like a baseless rant until it is backed up, regardless of who says it.  It has nothing to do with you personally.

My explanation to Jelly was an explanation of what I said and how tenses work using you as an example since that was what we were talking about.  What I said turned out to be mistaken, and I acknowledged that you were right about that.  The grammar lesson has nothing to do with that.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 18, 00:31:55
What persecution complex? Do you make contact with reality at all? Like, maybe, checking in for 5 minutes once a day?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 18, 14:27:57
I just think it's endlessly funny that rufio gave me a lesson on past tense when I am not the dumb ass that thought rohina LIVES in Australia.

Also, word to the wise, if you don't want rohina feeling *snickers* persecuted *roffles* maybe you should STFU about her.

To paraphrase Lorelei: Disabling the ability to type "rohina": would it cause you endless distress and an inability to communicate, or would you work around it? Discuss.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Milhouse Trixibelle Saltfucker III on 2009 June 19, 12:07:10
Again, I think you are just seeing what your persecution complex wants to see.  Before I'm going to trust your experience as a professor, I want to actually hear some specifics (which you gave).  Something that looks like a baseless rant is going to continue to look like a baseless rant until it is backed up, regardless of who says it.  It has nothing to do with you personally.

My explanation to Jelly was an explanation of what I said and how tenses work using you as an example since that was what we were talking about.  What I said turned out to be mistaken, and I acknowledged that you were right about that.  The grammar lesson has nothing to do with that.
One among your horrifically long tealdeeresque list of general failings is this: You keep stringing random shit together and claiming that it somehow constitutes "an explanation" or "evidence" or "grammar knowledge". Please look at it this way: I could sellotape together a pack of mentally retarded Atenist monks and call it "a religious revival", but that doesn't mean that we should start parading around the red disc. You're putting forth points that are almost, but not quite, completely irrelevant to the matter at hand, then doing entirely the wrong thing with them in order to achieve what you apparently presume to be some greatly significant epiphanies (and what, to everyone else, look like the ramblings of someone who decided PCP wasn't cutting it anymore and tried to shoot up pure mercury instead) - it is a lot like if you were to take two lemons and a bag of flour, shove them up your Reese-Witherspoon-distended ass, and call it a rhubarb pie. Now, would you be so kind as to take your late-night-frat-boy ramblings ("Have you ever, like, looked at your hands? I mean, like, REALLY looked at your hands? It's like, like, there's a whole other person, like, beneath the surface, and... [insert abrupt snoring noises]") to somewhere wherein someone actually gives a fuck? White Castle, maybe?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 19, 13:32:06
(http://missmalini.files.wordpress.com/2009/03/45126791.jpg)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 June 19, 15:05:40
Oh DEARIE ME the puffery on MSTY has gone to his head. Still, I am enjoy.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kutto on 2009 June 20, 01:31:33
The imagery. Reading that post is like walking through a vulgar art gallery. Thumbs up here, too.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 June 20, 06:57:46
<pic>
That looks just like how I imagined Nailati would look.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Milhouse Trixibelle Saltfucker III on 2009 June 20, 15:45:40
Oh DEARIE ME the puffery on MSTY has gone to his head. Still, I am enjoy.
Puffery? There has been puffery? Who is puffing, and who is being puffed?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 June 20, 17:36:31
Oh DEARIE ME the puffery on MSTY has gone to his head. Still, I am enjoy.
Puffery? There has been puffery? Who is puffing, and who is being puffed?

Don't look so innocent. Someone has a crush on you, when you are not being an ass or whatever. I think I know who it is. Will I say? I will not.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Milhouse Trixibelle Saltfucker III on 2009 June 21, 05:51:10
Oh DEARIE ME the puffery on MSTY has gone to his head. Still, I am enjoy.
Puffery? There has been puffery? Who is puffing, and who is being puffed?
Don't look so innocent. Someone has a crush on you, when you are not being an ass or whatever. I think I know who it is. Will I say? I will not.
Oh, THAT puffery. I don't count that because I like being an ass or whatever. It is all part of my Badass Imagetm.  :P


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kelly smith on 2009 June 23, 23:54:26
 :-[Gosh Simmers I'm new here this is my second post I didn't know that people  spoke so mean to each other >:( I'm on my way to find a safe and respectful site  :-*


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 24, 00:05:44
(http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/uglybutt/shivgorilla.jpg)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Assmitten on 2009 June 24, 00:41:32
:-[Gosh Simmers I'm new here this is my second post I didn't know that people  spoke so mean to each other >:( I'm on my way to find a safe and respectful site  :-*

Sig for posterity:
Quote
Life Is short and sweet.You only live once but If you live it right once is enough I love all thing and all people Being an RN Iv'e learn to respect life and people please pry for peace

I'm guessing that RN stands for "retard nugget."


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: HomeschooledByTards on 2009 June 24, 00:49:48
Sig for posterity:
Quote
Life Is short and sweet.You only live once but If you live it right once is enough I love all thing and all people Being an RN Iv'e learn to respect life and people please pry for peace

I'm guessing that RN stands for "retard nugget."

I would like to know more about this method of prying for peace. Does it require a special crowbar?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 June 24, 01:05:49
RN is the code for Rimini (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rimini). In this period of the year is (sadly) chock full of fucktards. That could explain something.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 June 24, 18:26:07
I would like to know more about this method of prying for peace. Does it require a special crowbar?

I heard that prying for peace was illegal in some countries.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Bass Junkie on 2009 June 26, 00:07:21
I heard that prying for peace was illegal in some countries.

It's O.K. if you're prying for Democracy, though.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 June 27, 09:25:42
Oh, sweet Jebus, the poor, virgin sensibilities! Didn't know people spoke to each other like that? Really? Please tell me Fluffy the RN was confessing an ignorance of the way people behave on this site and is not having a tragic epiphany about man's inhumanity to man. "Gosh" indeed. You enjoy that safe, respectful site, Fluffy. I'm going to stick around here and pry for peace.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: awrevell on 2009 June 28, 01:16:39
Why would anyone come to the home of "MOAR FIGHT!!!" and pry for peace?

Isn't that sort of like going to E3 and asking for a moment of silence for the passing of Jack Thompson (we can dream).

On the other hand maybe prying for peace means using a crowbar to effect peace through superior firepower (since there aren't any weapons in TS3 yet a crowbar would be superior firepower until someone made a better weapon).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: saffronmoon on 2009 June 28, 23:51:32
if we are talking grammar police , shouldn't plz be please?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 June 28, 23:53:20
if we are talking grammar police , shouldn't plz be please?

It would lack sarcasm, in that case.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: saffronmoon on 2009 June 28, 23:56:43
if we are talking grammar police , shouldn't plz be please?

It would lack sarcasm, in that case.

worse than that, it would imply intelligence.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 June 29, 00:00:01
Oh, the irony of some tard who can't punctuate complaining about nonstandard spelling. I think we need a rubber room for you people.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Georgette on 2009 June 29, 00:22:05
if we are talking grammar police , shouldn't plz be please?

It would lack sarcasm, in that case.

worse than that, it would imply intelligence.

Fuck me. For a 2 post person you're ARROGANT.

(Yes, I lack posts too but I know my place)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: timelycorruption on 2009 June 29, 01:07:12
A rubber room in an asylum run by grammar cats.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: gumba on 2009 June 29, 15:08:29

Fuck me. For a 2 post person you're ARROGANT.

(Yes, I lack posts too but I know my place)

No one will ever fuck you ugly shit, remember that.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 June 29, 15:19:02
Was that supposed to be
No one will ever fuck you, ugly shit, remember that.
or
No one will ever fuck your ugly shit, remember that.
?

Speaking of shit, I've been wondering: what is more correct, 'one shit, two shits' or 'one piece of shit, two pieces of shit'?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 June 29, 16:13:25
Was that supposed to be
No one will ever fuck you, ugly shit, remember that.
or
No one will ever fuck your ugly shit, remember that.
?
Well asked, Tsarina, though either intent still begs further grammaration (it's a perfectly cromulent word!).
Quote
"...ugly shit; remember that."
There is also a third possibility, an insistence that the world has abandoned fornication forever. I doubt this was gumba's meaning, but such a ghastly lack of clarifying punctuation leaves one's meaning open to all manner of guessing.
Quote
No one will ever fuck, you ugly shit; remember that.
For a newbie to blow his first post with such a poor display of grammatical stills - while posting in a GRAMMAR POLICE thread, no less - is pitiful, indeed.

Quote
Speaking of shit, I've been wondering: what is more correct, 'one shit, two shits' or 'one piece of shit, two pieces of shit'?
Either would be correct. Selecting the more appropriate phrase would depend on specific context.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Georgette on 2009 June 29, 16:51:58

Fuck me. For a 2 post person you're ARROGANT.

(Yes, I lack posts too but I know my place)

No one will ever fuck you ugly shit, remember that.

Your mom fucks me every night and loves it, so wrong there.

(When talking to the childish, I feel I must use retorts on their level.)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 June 29, 17:00:58
Quote
No one will ever fuck, you ugly shit; remember that.
I lol'd.

Thank you for answering my question, Liz. I thought 'one shit' was similar to asking for 'a water' which is, as far as I know, wrong. Or am I mistaken again?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 29, 17:04:11
Holy **** what is up with your avatar? O_O


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 June 29, 17:24:24
What are you talking about, Jelly? I have not changed my avatar lately. May I suggest you lay off the meds?
To be honest, I'm not sure. I stole it from someone on LiveJournal, and I felt it portrayed my reaction to MATY quite well.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 June 29, 17:29:32
*laughs* I just noticed it. It messed with my head. Couldn't decide if he was some sort of slug boy, into tentacle pr0n, or really, really surprised. =p


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tyyppi on 2009 June 29, 19:44:49
I actually know where that avatar is originally from. It's from Uzumaki. It's a Japanese horror comic where some really fucked up shit happens, like people turning into snails and then some people start eating those snails. Fun!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 June 29, 20:32:53
Mmm, giant escargo... sounds yummy.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 June 30, 05:42:11
Quote
No one will ever fuck, you ugly shit; remember that.
I lol'd.

Thank you for answering my question, Liz. I thought 'one shit' was similar to asking for 'a water' which is, as far as I know, wrong. Or am I mistaken again?

The question of "a water" is an interesting one to me. It may sound incorrect, but then it's fine to ask for a lemonade, an iced tea, or a grape juice, isn't it? Asking for a water skips the signifier, the "glass of". Ordering with a signifier would perhaps be more proper, as it can assist in alleviating certain ordering confusions (A beer? Do you mean a bottle of beer, can of beer, or a glass of what's on tap?), but I don't see why grammar would insist you include it for water when it seems perfectly permissible to omit it for other beverages. "A water" sounds more peculiar to our ears because we know water as a substance that doesn't come in individual units. However much water there is, a few drops or an ocean full, you still only have one "body" of water; it's all "some", which leads many to feel one ought to order "some" water when thirsty. Certainly, one can also order "some" lemonade, tea, or grape juice, but "a" should suffice when naming one's beverage of choice, even if that choice is water. I personally prefer to include the signifier and ask for "a glass of iced water", finding it less open to interpretation (no bottled silliness, thanks, and yes, I do want it cold), but if one chooses to omit that signifier and simply order "a beverage" instead of "a cup/glass/mug/pitcher of x", I see no reason "a water" shouldn't be every bit as permissible as "a glass of cold gravy with a hair in it".

When it comes to "one shit", appropriate use would depend on context, wouldn't it? Are you referring to one pile of shit, one piece of shit (maybe in a larger pile of shit), or perhaps one act of shitting (taking or giving a shit)? It's clumsy and awkward to tell your mates you're off to take one shit when "a shit" is correct (certainly no need to specify that you'll only be using the facilities once while you're gone), but if your physician asked you how many times you'd moved your bowels today, you might tell her you had one shit (two or more, of course, if your bowels are more active on the day in question). To whether one would need to refer to one pile or piece of shit, "some shit" would be correct when referring to the substance itself in any quantity, but there may be situations in which the quantity and/or arrangement of said substance is relevant. Perhaps someone inexperienced or uncontrolled in defecation made use of the nearest loo? There could be shit scattered all over the bathroom while one lonely, little shit made it into the bowl (of course that nasty shitter forgot to flush, and you just know he didn't wash his hands). There is one shit in the bowl. Still, unless there is such specific need to quantify shits in such a manner, "some" or "a" should be, in most situations, more than sufficient to the task.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Immortelle on 2009 June 30, 18:19:15
But we much all remember that the word shit was most likely introduced into todays vernacular by the lowest common denominator, who do not know jack shit about grammar, and nor would they give a shit anyway.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 June 30, 20:30:55
But we much all remember that the word shit was most likely introduced into todays vernacular by the lowest common denominator, who do not know jack shit about grammar, and nor would they give a shit anyway.

FYI: when When correcting or commenting on grammar, it is best to ensure that you are also correct (the rest of the time, it is not as important).

There is no need to put "and" before "nor" - it is improper usage of two conjunctions.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Bass Junkie on 2009 June 30, 23:57:30
FYI: when correcting or commenting on grammar, it is best to ensure that you are also correct (the rest of the time, it is not as important).
Quote
FYI: when correcting or commenting on grammar
Quote
FYI: when
Quote
: w

Ahem.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Nimrod on 2009 July 01, 00:03:28
"I took shit yesterday and I already took some shit today."  "Mr. Jones, your problem seems to be that you're taking the shit, rather than leaving the shit."  "Oh, well Doc, can you give me advices about how to stop taking shit?  The missis won't let up!" 

In conclusion, stop TAKING shit.  Seems like you uppity grammar types would refuse "take(ing) a shit" in preference to "excrete excrement" or "going to defecate" or "off to pass stool" or "make in the (use the) ((toilet)insert geographical slant/slang here), or some such shit otherwise.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: GelatinousSubstance on 2009 July 01, 00:13:49
FYI: when correcting or commenting on grammar, it is best to ensure that you are also correct (the rest of the time, it is not as important).
Quote
FYI: when correcting or commenting on grammar
Quote
FYI: when
Quote
: w

Ahem.

Busted?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 01, 00:30:10
Actually, according to the style guide I used when I taught, there was no right or wrong when it came to spacing and capitalization following a colon.  It was more a stylistic choice, with the possible exception of a list after a colon, where the accepted punctuation is colon, space, lower-case letter.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Terribletegs on 2009 July 01, 08:14:54
Actually, according to the style guide I used when I taught, there was no right or wrong when it came to spacing and capitalization following a colon.  It was more a stylistic choice, with the possible exception of a list after a colon, where the accepted punctuation is colon, space, lower-case letter.

Agreed.
http://www.englishchick.com/grammar/grpunc.htm
http://www1.umn.edu/urelate/style/punctuation.html#Anchor-Back-30815
http://www.grammarbook.com/punctuation/colons.asp


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 01, 09:26:34
In conclusion, stop TAKING shit.  Seems like you uppity grammar types would refuse "take(ing) a shit" in preference to "excrete excrement" or "going to defecate" or "off to pass stool" or "make in the (use the) ((toilet)insert geographical slant/slang here), or some such shit otherwise.
LOLwhut? Stop TALKING shit, Numbnuts.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Sairsadel on 2009 July 01, 09:28:52
The discussion about "a water" reminds me of Arthur Ransome's use of the phrase "a sea" in his book "We Didn't Mean to Go to Sea" (1937):

"A sea broke over her bows, and sheets of water flew up over the cabin roof, into the mainsail, and splashed down over the struggling figures in the cockpit."

I think Liz's reasoning applies here, so it's another example of the same thing.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 01, 14:03:36
The discussion about "a water" reminds me of Arthur Ransome's use of the phrase "a sea" in his book "We Didn't Mean to Go to Sea" (1937):

Except not really, since "sea" is a regular count noun with a regularly formed plural.  The fact that it's "a sea" rather than "the sea" just sounds like there's an implied "of water" there.

In my experience, "a water/lemonade/juice/etc." is mostly limited to restaurants, where it refers to a specific standardized drink order.  At home I wouldn't say, "I'm going to get a water" unless I was referring to an unopened bottle of water or one of many pre-prepared glasses of water, as opposed to, say, filling up a glass from the sink.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 July 01, 15:24:14
Except not really, since "sea" is a regular count noun with a regularly formed plural.  The fact that it's "a sea" rather than "the sea" just sounds like there's an implied "of water" there.
Saying "A" sea instead of "THE" sea makes me envision an entire sea flooding into some hapless boat, exploding it and sinking it in tiny scattered pieces instantly. *A* sea, to me, refers to a singular specific sea, which can be quite large, even for a small sea, as opposed to "the sea", referring to the ocean unspecifically, or "the seas", referring to the collective oceans.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 01, 16:06:02
I think it was probably meant to be hyperbole.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 01, 18:11:33
Have you read the book in question? NO? Are you familiar with Ransome's vernacular? No? Then STFU.

Thinking about rufio and Ransome in the same sentence makes me think of his comments about duffers and drowning. rufio is definitely a duffer.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Nimrod on 2009 July 01, 20:10:22
"Pre-prepared"?  Wow.  I can actually feel a few logic buffers sizzling after parsing that input.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 01, 21:26:25
I am familiar with exactly what Sairsadel wrote, which is what I am responding to.  If I'm not being literary enough for you, I really don't give a shit.

Nimrod, if you don't know what sticking "pre-" onto the front of a participle means, I can't help you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 July 01, 21:30:57
In that case, would you mind explaining what pre-prepared means? Before arranged beforehand?
I know what you meant, but the word itself makes no sense in that context.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 01, 21:38:28
Eh, prepared does not usually mean "arranged beforehand" to me, except in special cases.

"I drank a glass of water I had prepared." = I just now filled it from the sink.
"I drank the prepared glass of water." = Someone else just filled it from the sink.
"I drank a glass of water that had been pre-prepared." = It was sitting out on the counter when I got here.

It's a little weird to talk about glasses of water being prepared anyway, but then again we are talking about strange usage of "water" as a count noun anyway.  I'm sure everyone is now going to accuse me of being horribly non-standard.  Yawn.  I am not interested anymore.  Have fun.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 July 01, 22:01:04
If someone filled the glass BEFORE you were about to drink from it, it would indeed be arranged beforehand. 'Pre-prepared' is a pleonasm. 'Pre' is already a part of the word, and adding another 'pre' is silly if your meaning is any of the definitions mentioned here (http://www.google.dk/search?q=define%3A+prepared&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:da:official&client=firefox-a).
I could understand adding the other 'pre' if you were to express the state the glass was in before it was prepared for you, but that seems a bit muddy, and I'm sure there's a more fitting word for it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 01, 22:10:33
Well, as you can see from the etymology in Jordi's cite, "prepare" is not actually an English compound, but was borrowed wholesale from Latin, and English is not Latin, etc., etc.  While "prepare" does (to me) mean that the glass was filled before I drank it, it can't be used to mean that it was filled much more than a minute beforehand, and in this case I wanted to say that it had been prepared a long time in advance.  (Incidentally, if the "pre" in "prepare" were a standard English prefix, "prepared a long time in advance" would be redundant.)

Does that make more sense to you?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 July 01, 22:11:24
(http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2409/2036866796_a03b514fe3.jpg?v=0)

On a side note,
While "prepare" does (to me) mean that the glass was filled before I drank it, it can't be used to mean that it was filled much more than a minute beforehand, and in this case I wanted to say that it had been prepared a long time in advance.

I really don't get why it can't be used to mean that it was filled long time beforehand, regardless it's derived from Latin or not.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 01, 22:15:57
Heh.  Reminds me for conventions for naming important syllables; the fourth-to-last syllable is called the "preantepenult," where they basically just found three different prefixes that meant "before".


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 July 01, 22:22:16
Well, as you can see from the etymology in Jordi's cite, "prepare" is not actually an English compound, but was borrowed wholesale from Latin, and English is not Latin, etc., etc.  While "prepare" does (to me) mean that the glass was filled before I drank it, it can't be used to mean that it was filled much more than a minute beforehand, and in this case I wanted to say that it had been prepared a long time in advance.  (Incidentally, if the "pre" in "prepare" were a standard English prefix, "prepared a long time in advance" would be redundant.)

Does that make more sense to you?

I understand your reasoning, however, I do not find it very logical.
The very foundation of communication is to have roughly the same concepts of what words mean. Having a word mean something else to you than it does to the rest of the world can lead to interesting misunderstandings.
I don't quite get how you make Jordi's post with etymology support your point. It looks more like it confirms the traditional meaning of 'prepare' - to produce before intended use.
You may use the word as you wish, but must then expect that people will question it and perhaps even laugh at you. And if using it in posts, expect to clarify what you really meant like now. IMO, just accepting the standard usage would be less of a hassle.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Rothchild on 2009 July 01, 22:23:05
Since this is the grammar thread, I'd like to ask for help.  I have trouble knowing when to use effect and affect.  Most of the times when affect is used, it seems effect could be used in it's place.  Any grammar gods willing to help me out?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 July 01, 22:25:28
I'm not a grammar god by any means, but this (http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/errors/affect.html) and this (http://www.yourdictionary.com/grammar-rules/affect-effect-grammar.html) site explain the effect/affect difference nicely.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 01, 22:29:34
Ultima: last
Penult: first from last
Antepenult: second from last
Preantepenult: third from last

You're right - I fail at counting.  :P

No, I take that back, actually.  The penult is the second-to-last.  "First-to-last" is the same as last.  What the heck?

Quote
What's next? Postprenatepenult?

That sounds like it would be a synonym for antepenult, though.  Maybe forepreantepenult?  Are there any other languages that are classical enough to use in linguistics jargon?  Interestingly, I actually did find a hit for "preantepenult" in a paper about Palestinian Arabic.  I was surprised; I did not know anybody actually used it.

Tsarina - the usage is standard with people I normally talk to.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Marhis on 2009 July 01, 22:41:50
Hey it's fun; priorpreantepenult, propiorpreantepenult, priuspreantepenult...


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Nimrod on 2009 July 02, 00:03:35
In my experience, "a water/lemonade/juice/etc." is mostly limited to restaurants, where it refers to a specific standardized drink order.  At home I wouldn't say, "I'm going to get a water" unless I was referring to an unopened bottle of water or one of many pre-prepared glasses of water, as opposed to, say, filling up a glass from the sink.

Regardless of your idol technicalities, your context above demands the use of "prepared", unless you're going to dictate what amount of time qualifies as "beforehand".  So far as I know, beforehand simply means BEFORE the intended result.  One second, many years, no matter.  On top of that, you already presented the image of a tray or counter full of "many" vessels, of course you didn't "just now fill it from the sink".

"I drank a glass of water that had been pre-prepared." = It was sitting out on the counter when I got here.


There you go again, dictating qualifiers and definitions, just because "it's your normal usage", stubborn you are.  Whether you just now filled a glass to drink immediately, or sat it on the counter, or the glass had been there for hours, the thing has been prepared before it is used.

Semantics are fun.  ;D


ETA:  Wouldn't "pre-made" make more sense, or at least provide better imagery?  I was just thinking that the words "making" and "made" would be in better accordance with your examples.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 02, 00:25:45
Semantics are is fun.

Too bad you don't actually seem to be interested in it.


Quote
ETA:  Wouldn't "pre-made" make more sense, or at least provide better imagery?  I was just thinking that the words "making" and "made" would be in better accordance with your examples.

Not to me.  All glasses are pre-made, and water is not made at all, unless it's not really water you're talking about.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 02, 01:32:14
Since this is the grammar thread, I'd like to ask for help.  I have trouble knowing when to use effect and affect.  Most of the times when affect is used, it seems effect could be used in it's place.  Any grammar gods willing to help me out?

Remember
Affect is a
Verb
Effect is a
Noun

This simple mnemonic is pretty useful, except if you a) don't know what a verb and noun are, b) are a psychology student or c) rufio.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 02, 02:54:05
Well, affect can also be a noun and effect can also be a verb.  But I'm sure you knew that already.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 02, 03:11:41
Well, affect can also be a noun and effect can also be a verb.  But I'm sure you knew that already.

Yes, fuckknuckle, hence the mentioned exceptions. I also knew you were going to headpeen it, hence the listing of "rufio" in the exceptions.

On the other hand, for morons who are clearly having trouble with the basic distinction, the mnemonic covers 95% of cases. So, whose explanation is more FUNCTIONAL, Oh-great-wanker-of-the-functional? Mine. That's whose.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 02, 03:17:15
I didn't see any exceptions, unless you are trying to imply that the noun "affect" and the verb "effect" are only relevant to psychology students, which is not the case.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 02, 05:26:56
That's because you are a certified moron. However, for regular non-moronic people, as I said, in 95% of cases, they will be using affect and effect in the way the mnemonic suggests. Which was my point. So now I have made it 3 times.

Let's have a deadpool on how many times I will need to make it before it makes it past the headpeen and into the teeny tiny little brain that sits behind the headpeen. I am going with 4 more, for a total of 7.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: witch on 2009 July 02, 05:40:55
I think 7 is a trifle optimistic. I'm going for 9, as it is 3x3, 3 being my favourite number.  ;D


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 02, 06:03:18
I'm not disagreeing with you, rohina.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 02, 08:18:17
I love this thread because I am anal when it comes to spelling, grammar and the correct usage of words.  Rohina's acronym is right except in one or two percent of the cases.   An example of affect being used as noun would be:  'Darcy used an affect which was quite foreign to his disagreeable nature.  The misuse of effect and affect drives me nuts.  They are so commonly confused.  What are kids taught in school these days?

Do you 'make' or 'take' a decision?  If you 'take' a decision, I have to ask where are you taking it to?  If you 'make' a decision, it is a process going on in your head.  I cringe everytime someone says or writes 'take' as this, to me, is just wrong. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 02, 11:09:32
Do you 'make' or 'take' a decision?  If you 'take' a decision, I have to ask where are you taking it to?  If you 'make' a decision, it is a process going on in your head.  I cringe everytime someone says or writes 'take' as this, to me, is just wrong.
I have never once heard or read about someone "taking" a decision. That's just awful.

PS: If you're going to introduce yourself as "anal" about grammar, you might be interested to note that there are several easily spotted errors in your post. Hop to it, Grammarfan!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: SolaceDevotio on 2009 July 02, 15:11:32
There are people who say "take" a decision?  My head would explode.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: ZeKat on 2009 July 02, 15:19:08
There are people who say "take" a decision?  My head would explode.

You would be fun to have in my English class then! (I'm Danish, so English is taught as a foreign language)
People in my class have the worst spelling and grammar errors I've ever seen, and I might not even spot all of them, since it's my second language too  ::) I even have to correct my teacher sometimes, despite the fact that he lived in London for 6 years.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 July 02, 15:27:57
Yes, but at least they have the excuse of being foreign, which makes their mistakes amusing rather than infuriating. I mean, it's difficult to learn a new language, especially when your instructors are bad at it, too. People who are natively English-speaking have no excuses! With practice, you can even learn to recognize the distinct flavors of patois that foreigners have. For instance, Italians mutilate English in a distinctly Italian way, whereas Germans are entirely different: Germanian-English is always very stiff, and excessively formal, characterized by a rigid adherence to rules, whether or not they are present or correct, whereas Italian-English have this kind of babblative flow to it. A classic example of "Germanian-English" is FatD from here and around: His English is always extremely rigidly correct: While there are no apparent errors in it, in that his learning is very good, it's simply too stiff and formal, even in an extremely informal context. A side effect of this is that he was very good at hiding being 12.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 July 02, 15:37:46
I even have to correct my teacher sometimes, despite the fact that he lived in London for 6 years.
My mum studied Danish at university and lives in Denmark on 13th year. Sometimes, it's still noticeable that she's foreign. Living in an English-speaking country does not make one speak English natively.
I speak Russian at least an hour a day. I'm still not very good at it. Languages are hard. The fact that people are taught a foreign language and then expected to teach it to others, is, when you think about it, slightly pathetic.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: ZeKat on 2009 July 02, 16:17:09
I even have to correct my teacher sometimes, despite the fact that he lived in London for 6 years.
The fact that people are taught a foreign language and then expected to teach it to others, is, when you think about it, slightly pathetic.

Indeed, I would love a native English teacher. Also, well done to your mother for managing to learn Danish, it's so ridiculously complicated and inconsistent that we can't even speak it properly, I think half the Danish population still calls it "et hamster", when it is actually "en hamster". (Similar to the difference between a and an except we have NO RULE to identify when to use which. You just have to remember for each and every possible combination...)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 02, 16:36:31
I've been trying to learn Cantonese for 2 years now, an effort made more difficult by some of the local population. Certainly there are plenty of people, native Cantonese speakers, who encourage my efforts, but strangely it's often seen as something of a novelty that I would bother trying to learn to speak the predominant language where I live. This attitude puzzles me.

Regardless of what language I use to address someone here, many people will insist on responding in English. This is usually done in an attempt to be helpful, and while I appreciate the sentiment, it's hard to practice the local language when half the locals I meet are "too helpful" to speak to me in Cantonese. Others who reply in English appear to be doing much the same thing I am, taking the opportunity to practice a non-native tongue. In a third scenario, the person to whom I'm speaking is so enthusiastically impressed with my meager smattering of lingual skillz that regardless of what I just said or asked, the answer I receive is, "Wah, so good your Cantonese la!" Say thanks in Cantonese, begin to ask the question again. "You live here long time?" Two years, begin 3rd attempt at question. "Why you not speak Mandarin? Is much easier la." And there goes my bus. Thank you for your assistance.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 July 02, 16:58:57
Also, well done to your mother for managing to learn Danish, it's so ridiculously complicated and inconsistent that we can't even speak it properly, I think half the Danish population still calls it "et hamster", when it is actually "en hamster". (Similar to the difference between a and an except we have NO RULE to identify when to use which. You just have to remember for each and every possible combination...)
Actually, she has described Danish grammar as "castrated German", so that's not the problem ;)
It's mainly because Russian does not differentiate between, say, the plate and a plate, and Danish does.

Regardless of what language I use to address someone here, many people will insist on responding in English. This is usually done in an attempt to be helpful, and while I appreciate the sentiment, it's hard to practice the local language when half the locals I meet are "too helpful" to speak to me in Cantonese.
Both parties speaking the other's language is in many cases more foolproof, as it ensures no-one speaks in a too complicated manner. If I recall correctly, this was done on a Russian-American space project - the Russians spoke English, the Americans Russian. So if the locals hadn't been so busy complimenting you, maybe it'd be more efficient...
Still annoying, though.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 02, 19:04:17
the person to whom I'm speaking is so enthusiastically impressed with my meager smattering of lingual skillz that regardless of what I just said or asked, the answer I receive is, "Wah, so good your Cantonese la!" Say thanks in Cantonese, begin to ask the question again. "You live here long time?" Two years, begin 3rd attempt at question. "Why you not speak Mandarin? Is much easier la." And there goes my bus. Thank you for your assistance.

So I suppose Amy Tan got the speech patterns exactly right! :P


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 02, 19:53:14
the person to whom I'm speaking is so enthusiastically impressed with my meager smattering of lingual skillz that regardless of what I just said or asked, the answer I receive is, "Wah, so good your Cantonese la!" Say thanks in Cantonese, begin to ask the question again. "You live here long time?" Two years, begin 3rd attempt at question. "Why you not speak Mandarin? Is much easier la." And there goes my bus. Thank you for your assistance.

So I suppose Amy Tan got the speech patterns exactly right! :P

I've never read any of her books, but I just perused a few excerpts. Sure enough, the patterns I saw are very much like what I hear around me every day. For instance, someone might say, "You very lucky have money." That's not very good English, but it is a direct and accurate translation of the Cantonese sentence into English words. There was a weird learning curve I had for months where I would get frustrated because I couldn't figure out quite how to say, "I want to go to the diner to eat dumplings." I mean, I could say, "I want go diner eat dumpling," but I couldn't figure out the rest. Finally I got it through my head that there really is no "rest", that all the "to the" and other such phrases just aren't needed. Conversely, I imagine it must be incredibly frustrating for a native Cantonese speaker to be translating every single word perfectly but still be considered awkward and incorrect in her English speech.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 02, 22:26:44
For instance, someone might say, "You very lucky have money." That's not very good English, but it is a direct and accurate translation of the Cantonese sentence into English words. There was a weird learning curve I had for months where I would get frustrated because I couldn't figure out quite how to say, "I want to go to the diner to eat dumplings." I mean, I could say, "I want go diner eat dumpling," but I couldn't figure out the rest. Finally I got it through my head that there really is no "rest", that all the "to the" and other such phrases just aren't needed. Conversely, I imagine it must be incredibly frustrating for a native Cantonese speaker to be translating every single word perfectly but still be considered awkward and incorrect in her English speech.

Interesting - there really aren't any function words in the Cantonese sentence?

Word-for-word translation isn't a good method for any language though.  If it were, machine translation would be leagues ahead of where it is now.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 03, 03:05:11
For instance, someone might say, "You very lucky have money." That's not very good English, but it is a direct and accurate translation of the Cantonese sentence into English words. There was a weird learning curve I had for months where I would get frustrated because I couldn't figure out quite how to say, "I want to go to the diner to eat dumplings." I mean, I could say, "I want go diner eat dumpling," but I couldn't figure out the rest. Finally I got it through my head that there really is no "rest", that all the "to the" and other such phrases just aren't needed. Conversely, I imagine it must be incredibly frustrating for a native Cantonese speaker to be translating every single word perfectly but still be considered awkward and incorrect in her English speech.

Interesting - there really aren't any function words in the Cantonese sentence?

That's pretty common in a lot of Asian languages.  It's not so much that the words don't exist, it's that they're totally unneeded, like you can have sentences in English with "understood" subjects, like "Take out the trash."  They also tend to have trouble with "count" and "non-count" nouns.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 03, 05:06:26
That's pretty common in a lot of Asian languages.  It's not so much that the words don't exist, it's that they're totally unneeded, like you can have sentences in English with "understood" subjects, like "Take out the trash."

Most languages have very different ideas about the kinds of things that need to be marked (and where they get marked) than others (unless they're very closely related, of course).  It just seems kind of odd to me that purpose clauses ("[in order] to eat dumplings") and allatives ("to the diner") don't seem to be marked here.  It might actually make sense to just treat motion verbs like "go" as transitive and have the "object" actually be the goal of the motion (hence something like "I go diner"), but the clause thing is strange.  Japanese doesn't mark relative clauses (other than with word order) but it does mark other ones.  I'd think there was something marked on the second verb, except that IIRC Chinese languages are extremely isolating.

If I had hopes that I'd get a real answer, I'd ask Liz to translate some other sentences into Cantonese (or glossed Cantonese, anyway).

Quote
They also tend to have trouble with "count" and "non-count" nouns.

Probably because they lack number, and the count/non-count distinction has to do with pluralization.  Although, at least in Japanese (probably Chinese too, AIUI) you could probably make the argument that all nouns are simply non-count.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: professorbutters on 2009 July 03, 05:28:26
With practice, you can even learn to recognize the distinct flavors of patois that foreigners have. For instance, Italians mutilate English in a distinctly Italian way, whereas Germans are entirely different: Germanian-English is always very stiff, and excessively formal, characterized by a rigid adherence to rules, whether or not they are present or correct, whereas Italian-English have this kind of babblative flow to it. A classic example of "Germanian-English" is FatD from here and around: His English is always extremely rigidly correct: While there are no apparent errors in it, in that his learning is very good, it's simply too stiff and formal, even in an extremely informal context. A side effect of this is that he was very good at hiding being 12.

You can see this in Shakespeare's plays, where there are characters who aren't supposed to be English speakers.  The most famous is probably the bilingual "love" scene at the end of *Henry V*, where the French princess Katherine blows off a compliment with "O Dieu! les langues des hommes sont pleins de tromperies." Henry asks her lady in waiting,  "What does she say?  That men's tongues are full of deceit?" and Alice responds, "Oui, dat de tongues of de mans is be full of deceits. . . dat is de princess."  It's an almost word for word rendering of French into English.

There's another character in *Love's Labors Lost* who is a Spanish traveller.  Often the character is acted with a thick, almost indecipherable Spanish accent, but that doesn't fit the way he actually speaks, which is extremely fancy and formal, with at least three alternative words employed for the same thing.  The guy adores language, and he can't resist showing it off:  "see!  See!  LOOK how fabulous my English is!"  (Just ignore the fact that the play is supposedly set in France for now--everybody speaks English.)  Plus the stereotype of what Spaniards are like was different:  it wasn't all castanets and Carmen and ole; it was more Phillip the II, formal and stuffy with very starched clothes.  So his speech is hypercorrect.  Or Shaw's Professor Higgins is right:  foreigners speak English beautifully.  It's native English speakers who crucify the language. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 03, 13:50:34
Japanese and Chinese are similiar that way. You don't need things like "to the" in the language because it's implied. It helps that they have words(?) that do thinks like mark the subject of the sentence and another to imply what the verb is doing.

I went to the park.

Watashia wa paaku ni ikiimashita.

Directly translated: "I park went."

Wa marks the subject, I. And ni lets you know that iku (go) is the verb. The 'mashita' verb form lets you know it was past tense. If it was "itte" it'd be a command to go to the park. If it was "ikiimasu" then you are going to the park.

Now, ad a "ka" to the end of the sentence? It automagically becomes a question. "I went to the park?"



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 03, 16:54:46
Watashia wa paaku ni ikiimashita.

Quote
Wa marks the subject, I. And ni lets you know that iku (go) is the verb.

No.  Wa is in fact a topic-marker, which is sometimes used to mark whatever is considered the subject in English, but not always; you could also rephrase the sentence as

paaku ni wa ikimashita

but in this case you are focusing on talking about the park rather than on what you did.  Also, as you can see from the above, the ni particle is actually part of a postpositional phrase with paaku and cannot be separated from it without changing the meaning of the sentence.  In other words, it is identical to English allative "to" in this case, except that it comes after the noun it modifies rather than before.  There is no need to "let you know what the verb is" in Japanese.  I have no idea what the shit you are talking about there.

Itte is actually a te-form, which is used for multitudinous wildly distinct purposes in Japanese.  If you follow it with "kudasai", then yes, the sentence is imperative.  This has much more to do with the "kudasai" than the te-form, though.

Also, Japanese and Chinese are incredibly not similar at all when it comes to syntax.  I do know that much.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 03, 17:45:58
Yes, but ni and wa do not TRANSLATE into English. So why it may be "identical to English allative "to"" that doesn't make it MEAN "to." That was my point. Head peen. "O" "NO" "WA" and "NI" do not have an English translation. So, if you did a word for word translation, you wouldn't get anywhere. That was the topic at hand, so that is what I was talking about. It was also greatly watered down explaination so that people who haven't studied the langunage would get it.

For another example:

Neko no ai

Can be translated as follows and still be correct because "NO" doesn't have an English counterpart. It's merely a possessive marker.

"Cat of love"

"Cat's love"

"Love cat"

"Cat love"


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 03, 17:55:12
Can be translated as follows and still be correct because "NO" doesn't have an English counterpart. It's merely a possessive marker.

"Cat of love"

"Cat's love"

No, try "love of cat(s)".  That is exactly what it means.  Those first two translations you gave are, in fact, wrong.

And, as I said before, the fact that you cannot translate literally word-for-word is the case with every single language.

ETA:  For anyone who was actually interested in the Cantonese questions (yeah, right), this (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_verb) is apparently what is going on.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 03, 18:01:42
You are such a fucking moron.

Studied the language for 6 years. All those translations are in fact RIGHT.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 03, 18:02:51
You are such a fucking moron.

Studied the language for 6 years. All those translations are in fact RIGHT.

ROFL


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 03, 18:06:15
You're such a waste of time and space.

I could go into a list of name translations that are all "of X" have the same XnoY setup, but you wouldn't listen because you know sooo much more about EVERYTHING.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 03, 18:12:15
That's because X no Y is in fact "Y of X" and not "X of Y" like you said originally.  Only you could spend six years learning a language and so completely fail to understand how the grammatical particles work.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 July 03, 18:43:56
I even have to correct my teacher sometimes, despite the fact that he lived in London for 6 years.
The fact that people are taught a foreign language and then expected to teach it to others, is, when you think about it, slightly pathetic.

Indeed, I would love a native English teacher. Also, well done to your mother for managing to learn Danish, it's so ridiculously complicated and inconsistent that we can't even speak it properly, I think half the Danish population still calls it "et hamster", when it is actually "en hamster". (Similar to the difference between a and an except we have NO RULE to identify when to use which. You just have to remember for each and every possible combination...)

If Danish is anything like Swedish, there are rules for which words are en or et/ett, but they haven't been taught in ages. My grandmother was taught it when she had grammar in school (she's born in 1919), but I don't think my mother was. In my grammar classes the teachers said it "didn't matter", "because everyone knows it by sound", which makes me curious of how they teach it to immigrants (my guess is they don't, BTW).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 July 03, 18:51:30
Oh look, rufio has diversified and is now sharing his grammar learnings (or lack thereof) in more than just his mother tongue. Non English speakers the world over will now rejoice that they no longer have to follow his ramblings with subtitles. Huzzah!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 July 03, 18:55:51
If Danish is anything like Swedish, there are rules for which words are en or et/ett, but they haven't been taught in ages. My grandmother was taught it when she had grammar in school (she's born in 1919), but I don't think my mother was. In my grammar classes the teachers said it "didn't matter", "because everyone knows it by sound", which makes me curious of how they teach it to immigrants (my guess is they don't, BTW).

This is interesting. I will have to look it up. Thanks for mentioning it.
Especially because with the amount of English words in the language, those rules are needed to not make people sound like retards.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 July 03, 18:57:36
If Danish is anything like Swedish, there are rules for which words are en or et/ett, but they haven't been taught in ages. My grandmother was taught it when she had grammar in school (she's born in 1919), but I don't think my mother was. In my grammar classes the teachers said it "didn't matter", "because everyone knows it by sound", which makes me curious of how they teach it to immigrants (my guess is they don't, BTW).

This is interesting. I will have to look it up. Thanks for mentioning it.
Especially because with the amount of English words in the language, those rules are needed to not make people sound like retards.

The Swedish rules are here http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substantiv (http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substantiv), but the Danish page on nouns on Wikipedia is retarded and doesn't say anything about it. :/


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 03, 18:58:24
Oh look, rufio has diversified and is now sharing his grammar learnings (or lack thereof) in more than just his mother tongue. Non English speakers the world over will now rejoice that they no longer have to follow his ramblings with subtitles. Huzzah!

Don't encourage it. We get more than enough in English grammar threads.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 July 03, 19:14:14
The Swedish rules are here http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substantiv (http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substantiv), but the Danish page on nouns on Wikipedia is retarded and doesn't say anything about it. :/
The Danish Wikipedia is generally very bad. I suspect I'll have to drag myself to the library and find books on the subject :P


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: ZeKat on 2009 July 03, 19:23:25
If Danish is anything like Swedish, there are rules for which words are en or et/ett, but they haven't been taught in ages. My grandmother was taught it when she had grammar in school (she's born in 1919), but I don't think my mother was. In my grammar classes the teachers said it "didn't matter", "because everyone knows it by sound", which makes me curious of how they teach it to immigrants (my guess is they don't, BTW).

Yeah, I am pretty sure that there are rules somewhere, but I have never ever actually heard of them. Not even when I lived in the Faeroe Islands where Danish is taught as a second language. So they aren't taught, native Danes are just expected to know.

Fake edit: I went and looked it up, and there is NOTHING about en/et in my huge Danish dictionary. They must expect you to learn them by heart, since every single word is marked as either en or et, but there is no rule mentioned.
The closest I can get to a rule is that things with a gender is "en", the rest is it. So a man, woman, cow, girl and so on, is "en". A house or a tree is "et". However, a sheep is also "et", and a rock is "en", so the rule only takes you so far...

I am pretty sure immigrants are taught to look every single word up and memorize it, really.

The Danish Wikipedia is generally very bad.
Well, there's too few editors. There's only like 6 million people who speak Danish worldwide. Most Danes I know only use the English one anyway, except the ones who are 12 and no speak no English.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 03, 19:25:00


Fake edit: I went and looked it up, and there is NOTHING about en/et in my huge Danish dictionary. They must expect you to learn them by heart, since every single word is marked as either en or et, but there is no rule mentioned.
The closest I can get to a rule is that things with a gender is "en", the rest is it. So a man, woman, cow, girl and so on, is "en". A house or a tree is "et". However, a sheep is also "et", and a rock is "en", so the rule only takes you so far...

I am pretty sure immigrants are taught to look every single word up and memorize it, really.

Maybe because rocks come from "Mother" Earth? *shrugs* Lots of weird stuff like that.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Annan on 2009 July 03, 19:29:39
If Danish is anything like Swedish, there are rules for which words are en or et/ett, but they haven't been taught in ages. My grandmother was taught it when she had grammar in school (she's born in 1919), but I don't think my mother was. In my grammar classes the teachers said it "didn't matter", "because everyone knows it by sound", which makes me curious of how they teach it to immigrants (my guess is they don't, BTW).

Yeah, I am pretty sure that there are rules somewhere, but I have never ever actually heard of them. Not even when I lived in the Faeroe Islands where Danish is taught as a second language. So they aren't taught, native Danes are just expected to know.

Fake edit: I went and looked it up, and there is NOTHING about en/et in my huge Danish dictionary. They must expect you to learn them by heart, since every single word is marked as either en or et, but there is no rule mentioned.
The closest I can get to a rule is that things with a gender is "en", the rest is it. So a man, woman, cow, girl and so on, is "en". A house or a tree is "et". However, a sheep is also "et", and a rock is "en", so the rule only takes you so far...

I am pretty sure immigrants are taught to look every single word up and memorize it, really.

The Danish Wikipedia is generally very bad.
Well, there's too few editors. There's only like 6 million people who speak Danish worldwide. Most Danes I know only use the English one anyway, except the ones who are 12 and no speak no English.

Possibly there are three types of nouns, then: gendered (en), non-gendered (et) and irregular nouns (whatever the fuck they want to be).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lavandula on 2009 July 03, 20:08:55
I've been trying to learn Cantonese for 2 years now, an effort made more difficult by some of the local population. Certainly there are plenty of people, native Cantonese speakers, who encourage my efforts, but strangely it's often seen as something of a novelty that I would bother trying to learn to speak the predominant language where I live. This attitude puzzles me.

Regardless of what language I use to address someone here, many people will insist on responding in English. This is usually done in an attempt to be helpful, and while I appreciate the sentiment, it's hard to practice the local language when half the locals I meet are "too helpful" to speak to me in Cantonese. Others who reply in English appear to be doing much the same thing I am, taking the opportunity to practice a non-native tongue. In a third scenario, the person to whom I'm speaking is so enthusiastically impressed with my meager smattering of lingual skillz that regardless of what I just said or asked, the answer I receive is, "Wah, so good your Cantonese la!" Say thanks in Cantonese, begin to ask the question again. "You live here long time?" Two years, begin 3rd attempt at question. "Why you not speak Mandarin? Is much easier la." And there goes my bus. Thank you for your assistance.

It's so good to know that you're trying to learn Cantonese! Some of my friends have been in HK for over 10 years and they've never thought about learning it. I guess because a lot of us can speak English, my friends don't find the need to learn it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: PirateFaafy on 2009 July 05, 23:15:23
Can be translated as follows and still be correct because "NO" doesn't have an English counterpart. It's merely a possessive marker.

"Cat of love"

"Cat's love"

No, try "love of cat(s)".  That is exactly what it means.  Those first two translations you gave are, in fact, wrong.

And, as I said before, the fact that you cannot translate literally word-for-word is the case with every single language.

ETA:  For anyone who was actually interested in the Cantonese questions (yeah, right), this (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_verb) is apparently what is going on.

The headpeen has managed to start being inconsistent within the space of a single post. That must be some sort of new record.

How many topics did we manage to go through over the course of this thread?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 06, 00:46:58
The headpeen has managed to start being inconsistent within the space of a single post. That must be some sort of new record.


You would think so, but no.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 06, 04:14:00
The headpeen has managed to start being inconsistent within the space of a single post. That must be some sort of new record.

I fail to see how the two statements are inconsistent.  The first is pointing out that (rake in face!) X no Y cannot ever be translated as X of Y/Y's X (e.g. Neko no ai -> Cat of Love).  The second statement is a general truism about all langauges.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: PirateFaafy on 2009 July 07, 01:36:59
The headpeen has managed to start being inconsistent within the space of a single post. That must be some sort of new record.

I fail to see how the two statements are inconsistent.  The first is pointing out that (rake in face!) X no Y cannot ever be translated as X of Y/Y's X (e.g. Neko no ai -> Cat of Love).  The second statement is a general truism about all languages.

If it's true of all languages, I fail to see why it shouldn't be for Japanese. The alternate translations that were provided are (almost) all identical in meaning, so unless you're insisting that there are direct, coherent translations for Japanese phrases into English, they would be acceptable. Either way, I think one of your statements is rendered objectively invalid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 07, 09:43:45
There are people who say "take" a decision?  My head would explode.

Come and live in South Africa, you would be headless.  Yes, they say 'take' a decision every time.  It freaks me out. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 08, 19:49:21
If it's true of all languages, I fail to see why it shouldn't be for Japanese. The alternate translations that were provided are (almost) all identical in meaning, so unless you're insisting that there are direct, coherent translations for Japanese phrases into English, they would be acceptable. Either way, I think one of your statements is rendered objectively invalid.

There is actually a significant difference between "cat of love" and "love of cats" but I digress.

Of course something that is true for all languages is going to be true of Japanese.  Jelly was trying to suggest that this was a feature that was unique to east asian languages (which wouldn't make sense anyway, since Japanese is not actually related to Chinese in any way).  That was what I was disagreeing with.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 08, 20:10:08
If it's true of all languages, I fail to see why it shouldn't be for Japanese. The alternate translations that were provided are (almost) all identical in meaning, so unless you're insisting that there are direct, coherent translations for Japanese phrases into English, they would be acceptable. Either way, I think one of your statements is rendered objectively invalid.

There is actually a significant difference between "cat of love" and "love of cats" but I digress.

Of course something that is true for all languages is going to be true of Japanese.  Jelly was trying to suggest that this was a feature that was unique to east asian languages (which wouldn't make sense anyway, since Japanese is not actually related to Chinese in any way).  That was what I was disagreeing with.

That's not what I was saying at all.

I was responding to someone that pointed out that Chinese English speakers were speaking accurately, if they did a direct translation from mandarin or cantonese into English. So I illustrated that the same could be said for the Japanese language. Because they don't 'go to the store'. They just 'store go', with the verbage getting some sort of distinction with how they chose to say it. But you had to stick your head peen in and try and prove you were smarter than me by supporting my statements.

Because I never understood why you followed up "Japanese can't be directly translated either" with "NO languages can be directly translated." Because...wow, you sure showed me by agreeing with me.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jorganza on 2009 July 08, 22:07:17
Can be translated as follows and still be correct because "NO" doesn't have an English counterpart. It's merely a possessive marker.

"Cat of love"

"Cat's love"

No, try "love of cat(s)".  That is exactly what it means.  Those first two translations you gave are, in fact, wrong.

Wrong, the second one is indeed correct. The particle no gives possessive, so neko no ai would translate as (the) cat's love.
"love of cat(s)" as a translation is only acceptable if love isn't used as a verb, like in "my love of cats has no bound"


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 08, 22:55:13
Because they don't 'go to the store'. They just 'store go', with the verbage getting some sort of distinction with how they chose to say it.

Well, you picked a bad example, then, because there are far more grammatical elements there that you are deliberately not translating.  If you really want to do a word-for-word gloss, it would be something like "store ALL go.NPST.POL" for mise ni ikimasu.

My objection to your post was an objection to this statement:

Japanese and Chinese are similiar that way. You don't need things like "to the" in the language because it's implied. It helps that they have words(?) that do thinks like mark the subject of the sentence and another to imply what the verb is doing.

which is complete and utter bullshit from beginning to end.

Wrong, the second one is indeed correct. The particle no gives possessive, so neko no ai would translate as (the) cat's love.

You're right, I must have misread it.

Quote
"love of cat(s)" as a translation is only acceptable if love isn't used as a verb, like in "my love of cats has no bound"

Well, if 愛 is a verb, I had not heard about it.  Additionally, "no" can only be used to mark subjects in relative clauses, and I think there are some restrictions on it then, too.  Also, the word "love" in the "the cat's love" is not a verb either, so I'm not really sure I see your point.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jorganza on 2009 July 08, 23:54:27
Quote
"love of cat(s)" as a translation is only acceptable if love isn't used as a verb, like in "my love of cats has no bound"

Well, if 愛 is a verb, I had not heard about it.  Additionally, "no" can only be used to mark subjects in relative clauses, and I think there are some restrictions on it then, too.  Also, the word "love" in the "the cat's love" is not a verb either, so I'm not really sure I see your point.

I meant that when I first read "love of cats" I assumed (wrongly) you were trying to use ai as a verb.
That's not the case now though.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 12, 07:09:45
Don't worry about it, Jorganza.  Rufio's love of cats is nonstandard.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 12, 11:42:18
Rufio's love of cats is nonstandard.

Big Cat doesn't know whether to be nervous or relieved at this.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 13, 09:37:03
Why do Americans leave the -ly off their adverbs.  It is chronic.  'That guy did so bad in his test'.  'I was mad in love with you.' 

I notice it all the time while watching American TV. 

Why do Americans say 'Labratory' instead of Laboratory with the accent on the 'o'? 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: chaos on 2009 July 13, 10:22:08
Don't you know? It's just not "cool" to be smart, and commercial television caters to the masses, which are largely of the troglodyte variety. Not all Americans make these sorts of egregious errors. That privilege is reserved for the uneducated and the terminally stupid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 13, 13:01:37
Don't you know? It's just not "cool" to be smart, and commercial television caters to the masses, which are largely of the troglodyte variety. Not all Americans make these sorts of egregious errors. That privilege is reserved for the uneducated and the terminally stupid.

Actually I think it's 'masses, who are...." due to the fact that masses refers to people in this instance.   ;)

Even the supposedly erudite Americans on TV still make me cringe with this badly grammar.  ;)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 13, 13:09:36
Don't you know? It's just not "cool" to be smart, and commercial television caters to the masses, which are largely of the troglodyte variety. Not all Americans make these sorts of egregious errors. That privilege is reserved for the uneducated and the terminally stupid.

Actually I think it's 'masses, who are...." due to the fact that masses refers to people in this instance.   ;)

Even the supposedly erudite Americans on TV still make me cringe with this badly grammar.  ;)

As an American living in South Africa, I have to cry foul.  People having casual conversation on a TV show are one thing; newscasters and the like who have a terrible grasp of grammar are another.  I can't watch TV in this country without cringing.  Note that I'm not referring to the differences between American English and SA/UK English, but legitimately horrid use of the language.

Edited for grammar, naturally.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: chaos on 2009 July 13, 13:35:42
Don't you know? It's just not "cool" to be smart, and commercial television caters to the masses, which are largely of the troglodyte variety. Not all Americans make these sorts of egregious errors. That privilege is reserved for the uneducated and the terminally stupid.

Actually I think it's 'masses, who are...." due to the fact that masses refers to people in this instance.   ;)

Even the supposedly erudite Americans on TV still make me cringe with this badly grammar.  ;)

You got me there.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 13, 14:47:36
Don't you know? It's just not "cool" to be smart, and commercial television caters to the masses, which are largely of the troglodyte variety. Not all Americans make these sorts of egregious errors. That privilege is reserved for the uneducated and the terminally stupid.

Actually I think it's 'masses, who are...." due to the fact that masses refers to people in this instance.   ;)

Even the supposedly erudite Americans on TV still make me cringe with this badly grammar.  ;)

As an American living in South Africa, I have to cry foul.  People having casual conversation on a TV show are one thing; newscasters and the like who have a terrible grasp of grammar are another.  I can't watch TV in this country without cringing.  Note that I'm not referring to the differences between American English and SA/UK English, but legitimately horrid use of the language.

Edited for grammar, naturally.

Now that explains why you were so in-the-know about the bandwidth costs here.  Where do you live, maybe I can copy your legal version  ;D. 

Are you talking about the South African use of the English language here?  I agree the grammar in this country is up to sh!t.  I was born here but bred in various countries and I can't get over how people keep 'taking decisions' instead of making them.   

However,  my husband and I both notice how often the -ly gets left off the adverbs in the US because we chorus -ly together when it happens - a lot.  Even Oprah and her guests do it.  I think it is becoming a national standard because people hear the wrong version of the adverb so often on US TV

And labratory??


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 13, 15:27:17
Heh, I don't have a legal version either ;)  I are pirate cat.  If I get around to getting a retail version, though, I'll let you know.

And labratory is better to my Yankee ears than "labore-a-tree" (don't even get me started on the way "innovative" is pronounced here). But differences in pronunciation aside, yes, the general level of grammar in this country is atrocious.  I know of English teachers and school principals whose grasp of the language could make you cry.  And they're teaching the next generation!



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: PirateFaafy on 2009 July 13, 15:31:54
I know of English teachers and school principals whose grasp of the language could make you cry.  And they're teaching the next generation!

My English teacher in Grade 10 tried to teach us "would of". Go ahead, it's okay. You can cry.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 13, 17:46:11
I know of English teachers and school principals whose grasp of the language could make you cry.  And they're teaching the next generation!

My English teacher in Grade 10 tried to teach us "would of". Go ahead, it's okay. You can cry.

I would, but I am out of tissues.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 13, 17:48:28
Is "labratory" a southern thing? That's how I hear it here. (Yes, including me. I always that it was a schedule/SHED-JU-EL thing)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 13, 18:05:08
I've always heard "labratory" and I've never lived in the south.  La-bor-a-tory sounds funny and British to me.  It's the same thing that happens with op(e)ra.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 13, 18:06:32
My English teacher in Grade 10 tried to teach us "would of". Go ahead, it's okay. You can cry.

Weeping will come later. I'm far too busy being utterly and completely horrified.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 13, 18:13:15
I've always heard "labratory" and I've never lived in the south.  La-bor-a-tory sounds funny and British to me.  It's the same thing that happens with op(e)ra.

*shrugs* I dunno, it just sounds like the way someone who says "shed-ju-el" and "warsh" would say "labratory" saying "laboratory" sounds too much like "lavatory" which is not the same at all.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 13, 18:18:56
Is "labratory" a southern thing? That's how I hear it here. (Yes, including me. I always that it was a schedule/SHED-JU-EL thing)
I've always heard "labratory" and I've never lived in the south.  La-bor-a-tory sounds funny and British to me.  It's the same thing that happens with op(e)ra.


I'm pretty sure that labratory is an American thing - I've never heard an American pronounce it differently.  And here (South Africa), it isn't even la-bor-a-tory, it's la-BOR-a-tree.  I believe I've heard Brits pronounce it that way as well.  They still call it "lab" for short, so I say you can't have it both ways.

My English teacher in Grade 10 tried to teach us "would of". Go ahead, it's okay. You can cry.

This is one of my single greatest pet peeves.  It's such a perfect demonstration of how little attention  people pay to what the words they are saying actually mean.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 13, 18:23:31
Some of these differences (lab'-ruh-tohr-ee vs. luh-bor'-uh-tree) I never perceived as poor usage but regional evolutions in pronunciation. Of course, I could be wrong. Most Americans do seem terribly lazy in all things requiring active thought.

I still occasionally hear a newscaster or statesman of some type on air say "noo-kyoo-lar" instead of nook-lee-er. Or "in-trig-al" instead of in-ti-gruhl. I want to punch them in the head.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 13, 18:36:52
I know of English teachers and school principals whose grasp of the language could make you cry.  And they're teaching the next generation!

My English teacher in Grade 10 tried to teach us "would of". Go ahead, it's okay. You can cry.

I'm glad you had the sense to know better, but yes, it is worth a good weep.   :'( 'Would of' and 'could of' are also becoming world standards because they are so widely used colloquially.  It is so sad the language is being bastardised.  

Another thing I hear a lot is if someone happens to be in a car 'Get out the car' instead of 'get out of the car'.  To me, the first sentence means 'Get the car out of the garage' or whereever it happens to be.  It is just plain laziness, IMO.

Sometimes the preposition 'to' is omitted in an injunction such as 'write to me' - it becomes 'write me'.  

How often have I heard someone singing 'don' chew' instead of 'don't you'.   Laziness again.  Bad, bad, bad.  

CheritaChen, those mispronunciations are so annoying and are very American as is the, IMO, mispronunciation of laboratory.

Rufio, are you SA or from somewhere else and living here? 






Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 13, 18:46:09
Some of these differences (lab'-ruh-tohr-ee vs. luh-bor'-uh-tree) I never perceived as poor usage but regional evolutions in pronunciation. Of course, I could be wrong. Most Americans do seem terribly lazy in all things requiring active thought.

I still occasionally hear a newscaster or statesman of some type on air say "noo-kyoo-lar" instead of nook-lee-er. Or "in-trig-al" instead of in-ti-gruhl. I want to punch them in the head.

Not going to argue the lazy Americans aspect, but we didn't we purposely change up a bunch of pronounciations and spellings of schtick to distance ourselves from the British? It would make sense that we would change the way to say a word without taking into consideration that "OR" in the middle of labortory. Or was that just us being lazy Americans and just like how we just dropped the extra "u" out of words so that we wouldn't have to remember to write them?



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 13, 18:50:09
Some of these differences (lab'-ruh-tohr-ee vs. luh-bor'-uh-tree) I never perceived as poor usage but regional evolutions in pronunciation.

It has to do with the timing - it sounds better in English to have two-syllable feet, syllables sometimes drop out of three- and five-syllable words to make trochaic feet ala OP-ra or LAB-ra-TOR-y.  la-BOR-a-TREE is iambic, so it's probably just a regional difference in preference for timing.  The extra syllable is still dropped, though.

Quote
I still occasionally hear a newscaster or statesman of some type on air say "noo-kyoo-lar" instead of nook-lee-er. Or "in-trig-al" instead of in-ti-gruhl. I want to punch them in the head.

I've only ever heard Dubya say "nukyuler", but it's standard (more or less) metathesis = /nu.kli.er/ -> /nu.ki.ler/ with the onset cluster simplifying from /kl/, and the /i/ getting palatalized to be /kji/.  IIRC, we also had /thrid/ -> /third/ and /hros/ -> /hors/ in the past in English.  /in.ti.gral/ -> /in.tri.gal/ doesn't really simplify anything, but it might just be more natural to have to more complex syllables closer to the front of the word.  Then again, I've never actually heard anyone use that before.

It's interesting which changes people see as "regional evolutions in pronunciation" and which they see as laziness.

I'm glad you had the sense to know better, but yes, it is worth a good weep.   :'( 'Would of' and 'could of' are also becoming world standards because they are so widely used colloquially.  It is so sad the language is being bastardised.

If you're talking about speech (and not writing) I don't think it's laziness - it's just another timing/stress-related effect.  It'd be more correct to spell it "would've" and "could've" though they're pronounced the same way.  In writing, though, most of that looks bad, even to me. :P

Quote
Another thing I hear a lot is if someone happens to be in a car 'Get out the car' instead of 'get out of the car'.  To me, the first sentence means 'Get the car out of the garage' or whereever it happens to be.

In speech, my "of"s often get abbreviated to "uh" so "get out of the car" turns into "get outta the car".  Again, I think it just has to do with timing.

Quote
Sometimes the preposition 'to' is omitted in an injunction such as 'write to me' - it becomes 'write me'.

Now, that sounds really old-fashioned.  Maybe just because no one uses snail mail anymore? 

Quote
How often have I heard someone singing 'don' chew' instead of 'don't you'.

t + y regularly becomes ch in American speech, as well as d + y becoming j.  In fact, you also get tr -> chr and dr -> jr, at least in my 'lect.

Quote
Rufio, are you SA or from somewhere else and living here?

I'm not the person who's from South Africa, if that's what you're asking.  I grew up in Arizona, and am currently living elsewhere in the states.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 13, 19:02:52
I have to protest against differences in punctuation being attributed to laziness.  After all, laboratree is no less "lazy" than labratory is.  Pronunciations differ between countries, and even within countries, and despite age-old arguments to the contrary, there isn't one way that is more correct than another. 

Just out of spite, though, I will now P&L at the South African pronunciation of "innovative".  In-IV-uh-tiv.  Not inno-vay-tiv.  It makes me bonkers whenever I hear it, because I can't help but argue with the voices in my head about why it is so very wrong, especially since the word "innovate" is pronounced the same way as it is in the States (aside from accents, etc.). 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 13, 19:07:27
I don't think it was a general beef with language laziness as it was a rib at Americans in general. =p


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 13, 19:08:03
Just out of spite, though, I will now P&L at the South African pronunciation of "innovative".  In-IV-uh-tiv.  Not inno-vay-tiv.  It makes me bonkers whenever I hear it, because I can't help but argue with the voices in my head about why it is so very wrong, especially since the word "innovate" is pronounced the same way as it is in the States (aside from accents, etc.).

Interesting - in-IV-a-TIV is also iambic, contrasted to trochaic IN-a-VAY-tiv.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 13, 19:11:40
didn't we purposely change up a bunch of pronounciations and spellings of schtick to distance ourselves from the British? It would make sense that we would change the way to say a word without taking into consideration that "OR" in the middle of labortory. Or was that just us being lazy Americans and just like how we just dropped the extra "u" out of words so that we wouldn't have to remember to write them?

I have heard this before, and never actually researched it directly myself, but it does sound credible, considering other aspects of our history. Stupid and contrary and myopic, but credible. I think the dropping of the U was probably a bit of both (contrariness and laziness).

I've only ever heard Dubya say "nukyuler", but it's standard (more or less) metathesis = /nu.kli.er/ -> /nu.ki.ler/ with the onset cluster simplifying from /kl/, and the /i/ getting palatalized to be /kji/.

But that doesn't make it correct.

Quote
/in.ti.gral/ -> /in.tri.gal/ doesn't really simplify anything, but it might just be more natural to have to more complex syllables closer to the front of the word.  Then again, I've never actually heard anyone use that before.

I guarantee that you have, but didn't notice it. Lucky you. Of course, now that I've pointed it out here, you won't be so lucky.

Quote
It's interesting which changes people see as "regional evolutions in pronunciation" and which they see as laziness.

Well, I don't discount that the origin of the change was due to laziness. But those who never heard it correctly pronounced, and were taught their local pronunciation, can hardly be blamed for the laziness of their ancestors, can they?

I'm glad you had the sense to know better, but yes, it is worth a good weep.   :'( 'Would of' and 'could of' are also becoming world standards because they are so widely used colloquially.  It is so sad the language is being bastardised.

If you're talking about speech (and not writing) I don't think it's laziness - it's just another timing/stress-related effect.  It'd be more correct to spell it "would've" and "could've" though they're pronounced the same way.  In writing, though, most of that looks bad, even to me. :P

No, it's fucking laziness. How many other things in (American) English are spelled in a completely counterintuitive way, like phlegm or through? That doesn't make it okay to just spell them the way you'd prefer. Likewise, just because "would've" sounds more like "would of" instead of the full "would have" does NOT make it okay to use the former instead. It doesn't mean the same fucking thing, at all. It's no wonder people can't learn our goddamn stupid language, when this kind of "shortcut" excuse is being accepted even by otherwise intelligent communicators.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 13, 19:15:09
Interesting - in-IV-a-TIV is also iambic, contrasted to trochaic IN-a-VAY-tiv.

I'm debating with myself as to whether the 4th syllable is stressed; my guess is that it is not, unless "initiative" is also iambic, as they have the same pattern of emphasis.

If you're talking about speech (and not writing) I don't think it's laziness - it's just another timing/stress-related effect.  It'd be more correct to spell it "would've" and "could've" though they're pronounced the same way.  In writing, though, most of that looks bad, even to me. :P

No, it's fucking laziness. How many other things in (American) English are spelled in a completely counterintuitive way, like phlegm or through? That doesn't make it okay to just spell them the way you'd prefer. Likewise, just because "would've" sounds more like "would of" instead of the full "would have" does NOT make it okay to use the former instead. It doesn't mean the same fucking thing, at all. It's no wonder people can't learn our goddamn stupid language, when this kind of "shortcut" excuse is being accepted even by otherwise intelligent communicators.

Most people I've seen (and corrected) using "would of" simply didn't know it was incorrect, which makes it ignorance, not laziness.  Like I said before, I attribute this to a lack of awareness to what words mean - people making this mistake aren't paying enough attention to realize that what they are actually saying is "would have".  I have a suspicion that this is also the reason some idiots can't keep they're/their/there straight.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 13, 19:31:06
Quote
/in.ti.gral/ -> /in.tri.gal/ doesn't really simplify anything, but it might just be more natural to have to more complex syllables closer to the front of the word.  Then again, I've never actually heard anyone use that before.

I guarantee that you have, but didn't notice it. Lucky you. Of course, now that I've pointed it out here, you won't be so lucky.

Well, if you say so.  I do tend to notice things like that because I am interested in it, so I really doubt anything will change.

Quote
Well, I don't discount that the origin of the change was due to laziness. But those who never heard it correctly pronounced, and were taught their local pronunciation, can hardly be blamed for the laziness of their ancestors, can they?

Every instance of language change is due to "laziness" i.e. what it is easier for human speech organs to pronounce.  If we weren't "lazy" we'd probably all be speaking PIE or something, and language would be very boring.

Quote
No, it's fucking laziness. How many other things in (American) English are spelled in a completely counterintuitive way, like phlegm or through? That doesn't make it okay to just spell them the way you'd prefer. Likewise, just because "would've" sounds more like "would of" instead of the full "would have" does NOT make it okay to use the former instead. It doesn't mean the same fucking thing, at all. It's no wonder people can't learn our goddamn stupid language, when this kind of "shortcut" excuse is being accepted even by otherwise intelligent communicators.

Well, like I said, if you are talking about writing, I have nothing to add here.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 13, 19:48:00
I wouldn't say that "labratory" is a mispronounciation.  It's just the AMERICAN pronounciation.  In Texas, "Houston" is pronounced "HYEW-st'n."  In New York City, "Houston" is pronounced "HOWS-tun."  One of those pronounciations isn't "right" and the other "wrong."  They're both "right."  It's just context-dependent.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 13, 20:28:28
Most people I've seen (and corrected) using "would of" simply didn't know it was incorrect, which makes it ignorance, not laziness.  Like I said before, I attribute this to a lack of awareness to what words mean - people making this mistake aren't paying enough attention to realize that what they are actually saying is "would have".  I have a suspicion that this is also the reason some idiots can't keep they're/their/there straight.

I consider "not paying enough attention to realize what one is actually saying" to be a pretty fair example of laziness, though. Mental laziness, which is what we're really talking about, I think.

In Texas, "Houston" is pronounced "HYEW-st'n."  In New York City, "Houston" is pronounced "HOWS-tun."  One of those pronounciations isn't "right" and the other "wrong."  They're both "right."  It's just context-dependent.

If I really gave a shit, I could probably look this up and find out, but it's possible that the Houston after whom the Texan city was named pronounced his surname differently than the Houston after whom the New York street was named. Also, it doesn't rule out the possibility that one of them was a dumb fuck who was doing it wrong the whole time. But yes, to locals, saying "Hyew-st'n" for the street name is "wrong." I learned this remotely from my seat at a previous job, in a call center in a state nowhere near New York.

However....

I don't care how many New Englanders want to debate it: saying "sehl-tik" for Celtic is just moronical. Where did the name come from, if not the historic early European tribes? If whoever it was that named that dumbass basketball team thought it was such a cool name, they could have taken the effort to learn how it was most commonly pronounced. And if that pronunciation was deemed just too confusing for the rabble, then maybe they should have chosen another name.

Come to think of it, perhaps there was some dude/ette named "sehl-tik" involved, considering that the proper usage in this case (if it were supposed to be the tribal people) would have been Celts.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 13, 20:35:41
Heh - there is a street in Tucson called Goethe street, which the automated bus message ("Next Stop: Goethe street") apparently pronounces go-ee-thee street, though I've never actually taken the bus down there, so I wouldn't know first-hand.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 13, 20:56:26
I wouldn't say that "labratory" is a mispronounciation.  It's just the AMERICAN pronounciation.  In Texas, "Houston" is pronounced "HYEW-st'n."  In New York City, "Houston" is pronounced "HOWS-tun."  One of those pronounciations isn't "right" and the other "wrong."  They're both "right."  It's just context-dependent.

ATL has a number of these "traps" for the unwary, notably "Ponce de Leon" street. Say a form approximating "pawhnz del ee OHN" and you're wrong. It's "pahnce DEE LEE on". "LaVista" is not "luh VIST-uh" it is "LAH VEE-stur."

Add to that the conflict between the educated and uneducated in ATL, and you get natives saying something wrong due to ignorance or accent, and other natives eye-rolling. It's not "SMEAR-neh" it is "SMUR-nah." It's not "Kenner-SAW" it's "KEN-eh-saw." And, "MAY-retta" is REALLY wrong, it is "MAHR-ee-et-uh." You can tell, after hearing a paragraph spoken out loud, approximately where in the area the speaker lives, their annual income, their degree of interest in pro sports and beer, likelihood of the speaker having unfortunate hair, and take a good stab at guessing their actual neck color. The "dropped -LY suffix" is yet another excellent indicator. You can also tell a lot from whether the speaker clearly enunciates "you all" and "all of you"--it is rare to see anyone in ATL who hasn't given up and adopted some form of "y'all"--or if the speaker chooses to use "yawl" and "allyawl." Other tell-tale words that are more "mountain folk" than true Southern, but have been adopted widely, sometimes knowingly, sometimes not: "critter," "Bubba," "varmint" and "idjit" for creature, brother, vermin and idiot.

New Orleans has a number of these verbal traps for the non-native, and not all are due to French language pronunciations slipping in, but I'll let a Louisiana native discuss that.

You can also become a laughingstock in England if you don't figure out there are language traps like "Cholmondeley," "Leicester" and "St. John" which sound roughly like "Chumley," "Lester" and "S'n j'n." Again, will let a Brit discuss that. I'm sure s/he'd have a lot of cringe-worthy errors to report.

The winner has to be Bexar County in Texas. It's not "BECKS ar". It's "bear." IIRC, the X comes from an old cattle brand design. At any rate, it's silent. If you don't live there or happen to know, you get outed as being "not from around these parts" instantly.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 13, 21:03:43
Heh - there is a street in Tucson called Goethe street, which the automated bus message ("Next Stop: Goethe street") apparently pronounces go-ee-thee street, though I've never actually taken the bus down there, so I wouldn't know first-hand.

Is it supposed to be named for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe? Or is it for some Arizonan whose family has never set foot in Germany? I mean, like I said above, I hate to just presume someone is being an idiot, you know? Also, if it's a synthesized voice, it may not have been programmed to handle non-American words or pronunciations, and if the machine's operator simply input the proper spelling, it's definitely funny but not the little computer-voice's fault. If that's the case, someone should have entered the street name phonetically. Again, though, that would presume that they actually cared about the pronunciation to begin with.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 13, 21:13:18
Well, I'm not actually interested in poo-pooing anyone's pronunciation, computerized or not.  I just thought it was funny.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 13, 21:20:35
You can tell, after hearing a paragraph spoken out loud, approximately where in the area the speaker lives, their annual income, their degree of interest in pro sports and beer, likelihood of the speaker having unfortunate hair, and take a good stab at guessing their actual neck color. The "dropped -LY suffix" is yet another excellent indicator. You can also tell a lot from whether the speaker clearly enunciates "you all" and "all of you"--it is rare to see anyone in ATL who hasn't given up and adopted some form of "y'all"--or if the speaker chooses to use "yawl" and "allyawl." Other tell-tale words that are more "mountain folk" than true Southern, but have been adopted widely, sometimes knowingly, sometimes not: "critter," "Bubba," "varmint" and "idjit" for creature, brother, vermin and idiot.

Having just visited good friends in an Atlanta suburb last month, I can testify to just about all of the above. My best friend was originally from Connecticut but lived in South Florida for a number of years before he went to college in Atlanta, where he met his wife. While they're both college graduates and smart people, she, as a native of a more quaint rural neighborhood, says "y'all" and "critter" regularly. He still sounds like a Yankee.

Quote
New Orleans has a number of these verbal traps for the non-native, and not all are due to French language pronunciations slipping in, but I'll let a Louisiana native discuss that.

Beginning with the name of the city itself. It's not "New Or-leenz" or "New Or-lee-anz," it's "N'Ohlinz." At least that was my experience in my brief visits there. But they're forgiven because the place is (or at least, was  :() so damn cool.

Quote
You can also become a laughingstock in England if you don't figure out there are language traps like "Cholmondeley," "Leicester" and "St. John" which sound roughly like "Chumley," "Lester" and "S'n j'n." Again, will let a Brit discuss that. I'm sure s/he'd have a lot of cringe-worthy errors to report.

Unfortunately we have inherited some of that, thanks to New England. Worcester, Massachusetts has to be the fault of the colonists. "Woo-ster"? Really? Come on.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: originalhalf on 2009 July 13, 21:30:53
ATL has a number of these "traps" for the unwary, notably "Ponce de Leon" street. Say a form approximating "pawhnz del ee OHN" and you're wrong. It's "pahnce DEE LEE on". "LaVista" is not "luh VIST-uh" it is "LAH VEE-stur."
Add to that the conflict between the educated and uneducated in ATL, and you get natives saying something wrong due to ignorance or accent, and other natives eye-rolling. It's not "SMEAR-neh" it is "SMUR-nah." It's not "Kenner-SAW" it's "KEN-eh-saw." And, "MAY-retta" is REALLY wrong, it is "MAHR-ee-et-uh." 

*is smug that she is a yankee that speaks correct southern*


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 13, 21:31:23
Missed this:

Interesting - in-IV-a-TIV is also iambic, contrasted to trochaic IN-a-VAY-tiv.

I'm debating with myself as to whether the 4th syllable is stressed; my guess is that it is not, unless "initiative" is also iambic, as they have the same pattern of emphasis.

I would say it is, or at least it's a secondary stress (speaking of "initiative").  That is, the fourth syllable is stressed compared to the third syllable; stress isn't about is-it versus isn't-it, but about which syllables are more stressed than others.

Unfortunately we have inherited some of that, thanks to New England. Worcester, Massachusetts has to be the fault of the colonists. "Woo-ster"? Really? Come on.

Apparently there is also a place in England called Cholmondeley which is pronounced Chumly.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 13, 22:06:10
*is smug that she is a yankee that speaks correct southern*

Just as well you have something to be smug and correct about, because your pronouns are anything but correct.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: originalhalf on 2009 July 13, 22:28:42
You don't always get perfection from 457 year olds.  I finna work on dat fo sho.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Simsample on 2009 July 13, 22:29:43

Unfortunately we have inherited some of that, thanks to New England. Worcester, Massachusetts has to be the fault of the colonists. "Woo-ster"? Really? Come on.
I live quite close to the original Worcester, and unfortunately there are quite a few other odd names around here too. Gloucester (pronounced gloster), Cirencester (pronounced Siren-ses-ter), Leominster (pronounced Lemster) and Tewkesbury (pronounced by the locals as Chooks-burry) are just a few that spring to mind. It's always quite interesting to hear how these names are pronounced in the states, where many of the same place names exist.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 13, 22:40:57

Unfortunately we have inherited some of that, thanks to New England. Worcester, Massachusetts has to be the fault of the colonists. "Woo-ster"? Really? Come on.
I live quite close to the original Worcester, and unfortunately there are quite a few other odd names around here too. Gloucester (pronounced gloster), Cirencester (pronounced Siren-ses-ter), Leominster (pronounced Lemster) and Tewkesbury (pronounced by the locals as Chooks-burry) are just a few that spring to mind. It's always quite interesting to hear how these names are pronounced in the states, where many of the same place names exist.

Funnily enough, they're all towns (well, except for Cirencester, I think) in Massachussets.  I am not aware of Tewkesbury being pronounced Chooksburry but the other pronunciations remain.    

ETA: Actually, Leominster is "Lemminster", now that I think about it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 13, 23:36:52
Leominster, Mass, is indeed "Lemminster."  I would correct the pronounciation of "Worcester" as "WOO-ster," though.  It's generally either "WIS-tah" or "WUSS-tah" in Massachusetts  Sort of like how "Holyoke" isn't "HO-lee-oak," it's "WHOLE-yoke" or "HOeyoak," with the 'l' hinted at and "Holy" being as close to one syllable as it can get.  The "h" in "Amherst" is likewise silent: New Yorkers pronounce it "AM-herst" while the Mass types say "AMurst."

CheritaChen:
Houston, TX, was named after Samuel Houston, who did indeed pronounce it "HYEW-st'n."  My point was that "HYEW-st'n" and "HOWS-tun" are both valid pronounciations of "Houston" and that whether one pronunciation was "right" or "wrong" at any given time is dependent on context.  Saying "HYEW-st'n" Street in NYC is just as wrong as going to "HOWS-tun" Texas, but the pronounciations are not wrong in and of themselves.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: FerDeLance on 2009 July 14, 00:05:16
Your rite.  Evrywon shuld lern to spel propaly like me and yoos propper grama.  Its not ard you no I lernd it and look at me now.  A yer ago i cudent even spel prugremer and now i are won.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 July 14, 00:14:09
Apparently there is also a place in England called Cholmondeley which is pronounced Chumly.

Cholmondley is more commonly known as a name though there is a place called Cholmondley.  How about Beaulieu and Colquhoon?  They usually give the colonists trouble too.  Actually, there are gazillions of weird English pronunciations.  I think we do it just to annoy people.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rosess on 2009 July 14, 00:17:58
It takes a long time to find Hurkin, Utah, on a map, given that Hurkin is spelled "Hurricane."  The pronunciation isn't indicative of a local drawl; it's a one-name anomaly.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 14, 01:40:49
I would correct the pronounciation of "Worcester" as "WOO-ster," though.  It's generally either "WIS-tah" or "WUSS-tah" in Massachusetts

You're right. I didn't spell it in the correct local accent.

Quote
Saying "HYEW-st'n" Street in NYC is just as wrong as going to "HOWS-tun" Texas, but the pronounciations are not wrong in and of themselves.

I was agreeing with you, but saying it probably was due to the "Houston" in NYC having been named after someone else, someone whose name had the "HOWS-tun" pronunciation, and not just a...random choice on the part of New Yorkers to say the word "Houston" differently. Though that is also entirely possible, too.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 14, 07:29:57
Quote
No, it's fucking laziness. How many other things in (American) English are spelled in a completely counterintuitive way, like phlegm or through? That doesn't make it okay to just spell them the way you'd prefer. Likewise, just because "would've" sounds more like "would of" instead of the full "would have" does NOT make it okay to use the former instead. It doesn't mean the same fucking thing, at all. It's no wonder people can't learn our goddamn stupid language, when this kind of "shortcut" excuse is being accepted even by otherwise intelligent communicators.

I could not agree with you more CC.  However, I do think ignorance does play a part in it.  If you are a child and your first and subsequent hearing of laboratory is labratory then you will continue to say it like that ad infinitum and noone will be able to tell you anything different.

BTW, it is 'spelt' not 'spelled', and you appear to be qualifying moronic with the extra 'al'.  It should simply be moronic like ironic which frequently gets another 'al' added incorrectly to it.

Jelendra,  I was not digging at the Americans per se.  I just hear more American-speak on TV than any other, so they are the easiest to pick on for the aberrations I hear.  

As far as name places are concerned, I really can understand mispronunciations of these.  I mean really Cholmondeley pronounced Chumley - three syllables have been left out in expressing it. That is just madness. 

What concerns me more is


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 14, 07:43:19
BTW, it is 'spelt' not 'spelled'.

I believe both are considered correct.

Quote
Jelendra,  I was not digging at the Americans per se.  I just hear more American-speak on TV than any other, so they are the easiest to pick on for the aberrations I hear.

Ah, so you are just "digging" at anyone who pronounces things differently from you.  I see.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 14, 07:54:07
Hi Rufio

No, I grew up learning what I believe was a high standard of English.  I say that because good novels are usually written in the 'Queen's English' and having read copious amounts of those, I have reason to believe that I speak, write and spell according to those norms. 

Pronunciation is not my bugbear, it is incorrect forms of grammar and spelling. 

BTW, where did you Americans learn to spell?  When you read an 'English' novel, you must wonder about why Shakespeare added a 'u' to Love's Labours Lost.  What happened to all the 'u's in the words ending in 'our'?

'Considered correct' - now there's the rub.  For me it has always been 'spelt'.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: chaos on 2009 July 14, 07:59:08
AFAIK, "spelt" is correct as a past participle, but only non-Americans seem to use it. Americans always use "spelled" whether it's past tense, or past participle.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 14, 08:15:50


BTW, where did you Americans learn to spell?  When you read an 'English' novel, you must wonder about why Shakespeare added a 'u' to Love's Labours Lost.  What happened to all the 'u's in the words ending in 'our'?

Just as with pronunciation, how can anyone call regional variations in spelling or grammar incorrect?  American English is not subject to UK English rules.  Regardless of the reasons for the deviations, the deviations are there, they're real, they're official, and they're right.

And no one wonders why there's a U in labour/flavour/colour or why it's centre instead of center beyond about the 3rd grade, because we Americans learn pretty early that American English is different from UK English.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 14, 09:17:42


BTW, where did you Americans learn to spell?  When you read an 'English' novel, you must wonder about why Shakespeare added a 'u' to Love's Labours Lost.  What happened to all the 'u's in the words ending in 'our'?

Just as with pronunciation, how can anyone call regional variations in spelling or grammar incorrect?  American English is not subject to UK English rules.  Regardless of the reasons for the deviations, the deviations are there, they're real, they're official, and they're right.

And no one wonders why there's a U in labour/flavour/colour or why it's centre instead of center beyond about the 3rd grade, because we Americans learn pretty early that American English is different from UK English.

Why have the Americans changed the English language? What was wrong with the original English?  Do the Americans think that their version is the correct one or are they aware that it is a deviation from the standard of spelling used around the world EXCEPT in America?  I find this a little arrogant of the US, no offence to any American on here as you did not make the changes. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: chaos on 2009 July 14, 09:31:04
It's supposed to be more efficient.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 14, 09:35:19
Languages evolve.  Is it arrogance that Mexican Spanish differs from the language spoken in Spain?  Or, closer to home, that Afrikaans differs from Dutch?  Americans, in general, are not trying to foist their spellings on everyone else.  On the contrary, as seems to be the case here, there's this frequent insistence that American English is somehow wrong, just because it's different.  Many languages share a common starting ground but have all developed and changed beyond them.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 14, 09:42:25
BTW, where did you Americans learn to spell?  When you read an 'English' novel, you must wonder about why Shakespeare added a 'u' to Love's Labours Lost.  What happened to all the 'u's in the words ending in 'our'?

So, are you Brits seriously confused as to why so many American authors leave out the u in those words?  Do they not teach you that the "Queen's English" is not a universal phenomenon, or even that English is not spoken everywhere else?

Why have the Americans changed the English language? What was wrong with the original English?  Do the Americans think that their version is the correct one or are they aware that it is a deviation from the standard of spelling used around the world EXCEPT in America?  I find this a little arrogant of the US, no offence to any American on here as you did not make the changes.

This is like asking why the Romans decided to stop speaking Latin and start speaking Italian (was there something wrong with Latin?!!!!1111)  Language change happens.  Brits these days are not speaking the same English as Shakespeare did either.

As for spelling reform, there has been (and still is) a school of thought that English should be phonemic, or something, and that we should just get rid of silent letters or ridiculous spellings from French, and so forth.  I don't particularly sympathize with them, not because I like the French spellings and silent letters, but because if you change the way English is spelled then everyone has to re-learn how to read.  Changing ou to o is not a drastic change like that, though (it's a bit like how you now see "thru" instead of "through" (e.g. "Drive-Thru") or "donut" instead of "doughnut", which is practically standard).  I don't think it really accomplished anything, but it didn't hurt anything either.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 14, 11:58:59
BTW, it is 'spelt' not 'spelled',

It's American, not British.

Quote
and you appear to be qualifying moronic with the extra 'al'.  It should simply be moronic like ironic which frequently gets another 'al' added incorrectly to it.

It had a funnier, more rant-y sound than "moronic," so I went with it. It is, in fact, incorrect, but

Quote
What concerns me more is

I see.

BTW, where did you Americans learn to spell?

Um...America? Look, I never argued that American alterations to British English were superior, but in our language, they are correct. And in fact, some of them are simpler, like the dropped Us and the transposed ending "er" for "re."

None of this has anything to do with poor grammar that is poor no matter which flavo(u)r of English one speaks. Or careless punctuation, or txt spk. People are (supposedly) being taught proper English, but not using it, and using alternative forms in completely inappropriate places. That's what I'm bitching about.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Simsample on 2009 July 14, 12:38:18
Why have the Americans changed the English language? What was wrong with the original English?  Do the Americans think that their version is the correct one or are they aware that it is a deviation from the standard of spelling used around the world EXCEPT in America?  I find this a little arrogant of the US, no offence to any American on here as you did not make the changes. 
Well, I'm English and I think the Americans have a good point. Any language that will pronounce Tewkesbury as Chooksburry, Cholmondeley as Chumley and Beaulieu as Bewley needs something done to it. :) I remember an English teacher telling me that 'Ghoti' could be pronounced 'Fish'- gh as in enough, o as in women and ti as in fiction. Also, there are a fair few caollquial pronunciation differences, too- the rest of the UK pronounces Tewkesbury as 'Tukesburry', and it only seems to be Gloucestershire people that pronounce it 'chooksburry' (and even then, not all of them). My grandmother pronounced 'saucepan' as 'sospan', so it's easy to see how spelling differences would have arisen. I like the diversity, and the fact that I can chat to my butties (mates) in local slang- confusing my neighbours, who come from the north.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: toad on 2009 July 14, 12:56:48
You idiots, stop feeding the troll, or else feed it in a funny way.  Maybe wear a hat like Inge, or use hilarious sporks - this crabby defense of your ability to be Amurrikan is really boring.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 July 14, 12:56:58
STFU Audrey - you're making me embarassed to be English.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 14, 13:27:09
Well, I'm English and I think the Americans have a good point. Any language that will pronounce Tewkesbury as Chooksburry, Cholmondeley as Chumley and Beaulieu as Bewley needs something done to it. :) I remember an English teacher telling me that 'Ghoti' could be pronounced 'Fish'- gh as in enough, o as in women and ti as in fiction.

Ah, you make me want to dust off my Eddie Izzard DVDs! I don't even remember which concert the language bit was from...Dressed to Kill, maybe. maxon, as long as there are brilliant Brits like Eddie Izzard in this world, you have no reason to be embarrassed.

We Americans still haven't quite gotten over the shame of Dubya.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 July 14, 13:34:11
As for spelling reform, there has been (and still is) a school of thought that English should be phonemic, or something, and that we should just get rid of silent letters or ridiculous spellings from French, and so forth.  I don't particularly sympathize with them, not because I like the French spellings and silent letters, but because if you change the way English is spelled then everyone has to re-learn how to read.
You mean like in this classic piece? (http://www.mantex.co.uk/samples/spell.htm)
I seem to recall that if such proposals were implemented, we would end up speaking German.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 14, 13:47:34
Gawd, Eddie Izzard. I love that man, but I have to watch him in subtitles. WTF, dude. I bought one of his CDs, I had SEEN the stand up before, but I couldn't understand one word of what he said on the CD.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 14, 14:12:32
Gawd, Eddie Izzard. I love that man, but I have to watch him in subtitles. WTF, dude. I bought one of his CDs, I had SEEN the stand up before, but I couldn't understand one word of what he said on the CD.

Funny, I have no problem with Eddie's accent. Sometimes I do encounter an accent that makes me feel like an idiot because I know it's still English, but I can't parse it. This happened, I am chagrined to say, the first time I put on the DVD of Trainspotting. I had to read subtitles for the whole beginning monologue, and then again every time Begbie spoke. Fortunately, once I read the words, I could from then on actually hear them, too.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 14, 14:18:40
He was okay during his newer stand up, where he was wearing all black, instead of the kimono thing? He spoke a lot slower there. And he didn't have 15 minutes of French. =p


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 14, 15:03:23
As for spelling reform, there has been (and still is) a school of thought that English should be phonemic, or something, and that we should just get rid of silent letters or ridiculous spellings from French, and so forth.  I don't particularly sympathize with them, not because I like the French spellings and silent letters, but because if you change the way English is spelled then everyone has to re-learn how to read.
You mean like in this classic piece? (http://www.mantex.co.uk/samples/spell.htm)
I seem to recall that if such proposals were implemented, we would end up speaking German.

Ha - yes, exactly.

To people who think this is a troll, I'd like to point out that more regular MATYzens have had this argument with me in perfect seriousness before.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 July 14, 21:33:00
Gawd, Eddie Izzard. I love that man, but I have to watch him in subtitles. WTF, dude. I bought one of his CDs, I had SEEN the stand up before, but I couldn't understand one word of what he said on the CD.

It wasn't the one he did in French, was it?  Or did that one not make it over there?  Eddie kills me.

Funny, I have no problem with Eddie's accent. Sometimes I do encounter an accent that makes me feel like an idiot because I know it's still English, but I can't parse it. This happened, I am chagrined to say, the first time I put on the DVD of Trainspotting. I had to read subtitles for the whole beginning monologue, and then again every time Begbie spoke. Fortunately, once I read the words, I could from then on actually hear them, too.

Quite a few of us south of the border would have trouble with broad Glaswegian but most Scots are fathomable for the English.  Robert Carlyle is a big favourite here: he started out on TV in Hamish MacBeth - most entertaining.  I loved Trainspotting, book and film.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: chaos on 2009 July 14, 22:40:14
Haha, in the American release of Trainspotting (the book), there was an entire glossary of terms that one had to learn in order to understand the Scottish slang and much of the brogue. I had no trouble understanding the dialog in the film, except for a few of Spud's lines.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 14, 23:10:38
To people who think this is a troll, I'd like to point out that more regular MATYzens have had this argument with me in perfect seriousness before.

Yes, well, YOU are nonstandardly amusing, whereas Audrey is a haughty, holier-than-thou, supercilious bitch.

Oh, sorry, I'm American, so I have to be all stupid-like.

Rufio, yer fun-dum, Audrey's lahdidah-dum.  Dese kolour dont runs!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 15, 00:00:55
Haha, in the American release of Trainspotting (the book), there was an entire glossary of terms that one had to learn in order to understand the Scottish slang and much of the brogue. I had no trouble understanding the dialog in the film, except for a few of Spud's lines.

Oh man, I had forgotten about the glossary! I saw the film many, many times before I finally got and read the novel (backwards, I know, but I have my lust for Ewan McGregor to thank for introducing me to Danny Boyle movies), so it wasn't as difficult to read the dialectal narrative as it might have otherwise been. I don't remember being as impressed with the sequel Porno, but it has been a while and I don't remember much about it. I should re-read them soon.

I've seen Robert Carlyle in a few things since Trainspotting and didn't have as much trouble understanding him. Either I adapted to his speech, or those characters weren't quite so in-your-face regional as Begbie.

The contrast between his clipped delivery and Ewan's own musical, more lilting speech is quite amusing, too. But the man still can't really do a decent American accent, poor dear.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 15, 14:27:30
I think Robert upped the accent for Trainspotting. He wasn't nearly so bad in Ravenous or 28 Weeks Later.
(I will not admit to seeing Eragorn, but he wasn't bad there either)

@Maxon: Yes, it was the one where he did the 10+ minutes in French. It's much easier to understand it when you can see him gesturing what the words mean. =p


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 15, 14:42:29
Part of the hilarity was his choice of random things for the monkey to do, and him scrambling to find words to describe them. I don't speak a word of French, but with him pantomiming the whole thing, it was a scream. Cheeky monkey!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 15, 22:01:48
My problem isn't so much accents as mumblers.

I have no difficulties understanding Eddie Izzard, even in French. (It helps that his French is pretty simple, and that I have heard his routines in English first.)

Trainspotting was pretty easy, becuase I'd read the book and gotten the accent "in my head" beforehand (though, yes, Spud and Begbie were the most difficult accents; Spud kind of speaks his own language, likesay, catboy).

I even understood about 90% of the Brad Pitt (invented, I assume) "pikey" accent in Snatch. Jwerna duhg? Snahz duhg! Dun baht. Gudduhg. Tekdeh duhg.

For more incomprehensibility from another land, I understood the disturbed black woman ("Soulja Girl") ranting on the MARTA train (as shown on YT). I didn't know what a "Young Jeezy" was, but that's just a cultural issue.

But mumblers are my bane. The range of my hearing, high and low, is great, but I have slight middle ear deafness ("crowd deafness") that turns mumbles to mush, especially if there is background noise. Films that play background music or noises at nearly the same freq. as the people speaking...ooh, I hate that. I suspect that adjusting to it, and having a mostly deaf grandfather and totally deaf friend, has made me better at articulating clearly (when I must, I can mumble sometimes, too) as well as at understanding accents slightly easier.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: reggikko on 2009 July 15, 22:14:18
But mumblers are my bane. The range of my hearing, high and low, is great, but I have slight middle ear deafness ("crowd deafness") that turns mumbles to mush, especially if there is background noise. Films that play background music or noises at nearly the same freq. as the people speaking...ooh, I hate that.

Hey, I have that, too. I didn't know it had an actual name. I think mine comes from listening to too much overly loud music as a teen. We didn't have all these fancy warnings like you whippersnappers do.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 15, 23:45:04
But mumblers are my bane. The range of my hearing, high and low, is great, but I have slight middle ear deafness ("crowd deafness") that turns mumbles to mush, especially if there is background noise. Films that play background music or noises at nearly the same freq. as the people speaking...ooh, I hate that.

Hey, I have that, too. I didn't know it had an actual name. I think mine comes from listening to too much overly loud music as a teen. We didn't have all these fancy warnings like you whippersnappers do.

I am totally guilty of mumbling, but I can enunciate when I need to.  I agree that it's not always easy to decipher.  I just had to go through an automated phone menu where the recorded voice sounded a whole lot like Alvin the chipmunk with a mouthful of oatmeal speaking from the bottom of an oil drum.  I either paid my phone bill or ordered a Russian bride.  Time will tell which!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 16, 01:06:40
I either paid my phone bill or ordered a Russian bride.  Time will tell which!

So, either way, you won.

Of course, you may have just adopted a dog.

(PRESS ONE FOR ENGLISH, PRESS 2 FOR PIKEY, PRESSOS TRES PARA GRINGOBOT HABLAR DEE ESPANOLOS.
*boop*
Wotcher. Jwerna duhg? Snahz duhg. Dun baht...mooch.)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 16, 01:43:57
I either paid my phone bill or ordered a Russian bride.  Time will tell which!

So, either way, you won.

Of course, you may have just adopted a dog.

(PRESS ONE FOR ENGLISH, PRESS 2 FOR PIKEY, PRESSOS TRES PARA GRINGOBOT HABLAR DEE ESPANOLOS.
*boop*
Wotcher. Jwerna duhg? Snahz duhg. Dun baht...mooch.)

Yes, but I live in California!  When my Russian bride gets here, she'll be so upset since we can't get married.  And I really don't want to move to Iowa.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 16, 08:03:43
Hi, y'all.  I haven't been on for a couple of days so forgive me for rehashing stuff appearing a page back, but I could not let this one go.  

Quote
whereas Audrey is a haughty, holier-than-thou, supercilious bitch.

Whoa, that's a bit strong.  What a pity you couldn't continue the alliteration ;)

Not a troll at all, just a purist English-lover.  I am not trying to stir, just airing my peeves.
Another one for the record.  It bugs the shit out of me when I hear, again on TV, the incorrect use of either, or and neither, nor.  1 out of a 100 times, I will hear ' I don't like that man', said Jane.  'Me either', said Joan.   What has happened to the double negative?  Sure, we all get what she is trying to say, but it is just plain ignorance and bad grammar.  

Quote
STFU Audrey - you're making me embarassed to be English.

Actually, I'm not English (as born in England), so don't be embarrassed.  Be embarrassed that you are not defending the correct usage of your mother tongue.  

I'm sorry that I appear to be hitting on the Americans, and that it is perceived to be bitchy, but what I hear on American TV is the source of my pet peeves.  You should see me cringe at the pronunciations and incorrect grammar of my fellow, darker-hued compatriots on SATV as they mutilate the English language.  

Spelling, labor vs labour, I can understand, yeah, yeah, it is an evolution of the language, but it is one that I don't like but will have to accept.  

I like standards whereby if I hear or see something that is totally contrary to what I have been taught is textbook English, I have something by which to measure its incorrectness.

Peace. ;)





Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: spaceface on 2009 July 16, 10:29:19
@ Audrey: You're South African, aren't you? So you made it to MATY from the far end of the internets.

I will give you a brief summary of what people have been trying to explain, and what you should already know: US English and UK English are two different languages. Just ask your Operating System.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 16, 10:59:37
@ Audrey: You're South African, aren't you? So you made it to MATY from the far end of the internets.

I will give you a brief summary of what people have been trying to explain, and what you should already know: US English and UK English are two different languages. Just ask your Operating System.

Thanks, I pretty much figured that out.  ;D
Yeah, discovered MATY and this thread on a link from Mod the Sims and since I love English (UK that is) I quickly jumped onto this thread to air my pet peeves about US English, although I am aware that it is here to stay. ;)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 July 16, 11:43:44
Yeah - except in reality there's no such thing as 'correct' UK English.  It changes all the time, just like any other language.  Sure, the change may be slow but, y'know, if languages didn't change with time, we'd all still be speaking the Ur language.  There's an argument to be made for asking people to use language (on boards like this) in a way that is comprehensible, elegant and sensible and follows rules we all (maybe) understand but to focus on differences in the use of language in separate and different cultures and say that one is wrong is just stupid even if they do nominally use the same language. 

Typical it would be an 'outsider' who insists on applying over-strict 'correct' rules of English for the English. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 16, 14:04:21
Apparently, She Knows Better Than You. We should just agree with her and try to be perfect like her.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: PirateFaafy on 2009 July 16, 15:21:11
There is, however, something to be said about certain evolutions that should really be repressed for the sake of sanity, such as the movement that exists in high school environments known as "I should be allowed to spell things however I want, since languages are always changing". Usually, I just direct them to the works of Geoffrey Chaucer.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 16, 15:38:48
Yeaaaah, you can spell NAMES however you want. Sounds like those students need to have some spelling tests that count for 20% of their final grade. Along with essays that having 10% knocked off for too many spelling errors.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 16, 16:03:17
Another one for the record.  It bugs the shit out of me when I hear, again on TV, the incorrect use of either, or and neither, nor.  1 out of a 100 times, I will hear ' I don't like that man', said Jane.  'Me either', said Joan.   What has happened to the double negative?

I believe it's simply short for "I don't either", since negatives are generally marked with the auxiliary in English anyway.  I don't know why it's "me", but the for the record I've also heard "me neither".

There is, however, something to be said about certain evolutions that should really be repressed for the sake of sanity, such as the movement that exists in high school environments known as "I should be allowed to spell things however I want, since languages are always changing".

Yeah, that's not "evolution".

Yeah, discovered MATY and this thread on a link from Mod the Sims and since I love English (UK that is) I quickly jumped onto this thread to air my pet peeves about US English, although I am aware that it is here to stay. ;)

So, since we don't speak your favorite language, you're going to go trolling so you can tell us we're doing it wrong?  I'm not particularly fond of French, but that doesn't mean I'm going to go to a board where people speak French occasionally and tell them all to STFU and that US English is the One True Language.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 16, 16:12:34
I'm not particularly fond of French, but that doesn't mean I'm going to go to a board where people speak French occasionally and tell them all to STFU and that US English is the One True Language.

Why not? It sounds like a lovely way to entertain yourself. Just imagine how indignant and rude you might goad them into being! Perhaps you would even learn new obscenities in French. Then you could report back here and tell us all about it.

Le singe est sur la branche....


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 16, 16:25:57
The monkey is on the table. WHY is the monkey on the table? </Eddie Izzard>


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 16, 18:27:39
So, since we don't speak your favorite language, you're going to go trolling so you can tell us we're doing it wrong?  I'm not particularly fond of French, but that doesn't mean I'm going to go to a board where people speak French occasionally and tell them all to STFU and that US English is the One True Language.

What the hell did French ever do to you?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 17, 00:20:02
Nothing; it's just not as aesthetically pleasing to me as other languages.  I don't have anything against someone preferring one language to another, really, as long as no one is telling anyone else what they should be speaking.

For the record, English is not my favorite language in certain respects either (mostly phonology and orthography), though the fact that it's largely analytic is somewhat attractive to me.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 17, 12:05:14
Quote
So, since we don't speak your favorite language, you're going to go trolling so you can tell us we're doing it wrong?


You are taking this way too personally.  Did I say that that?  

Why do you think I am trolling? ???

I have a feeling I am not welcome here so will take myself off forthwith.  Although it is a shame that someone can't come onto a thread called the GRAMMAR POLICE and air a few grievances about the state of the English language, whether it be US or UK.  

You can all put your shields and swords away.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: spaceface on 2009 July 17, 12:33:12
A flounce, so soon?  :(


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 July 17, 14:41:10
Did we just witness a flame-and-run?  What IS a troll then?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 17, 14:56:09
We didn't feed it, so it's leaving. =p


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 17, 15:47:29
Did we just witness a flame-and-run?  What IS a troll then?

Well, some trolls apparently harbour strange grievances towards the French and their supposedly idiotic refusal to speak the Language Of Linguists, Anglish.

Or something. Sorry, I dozed off.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: spaceface on 2009 July 17, 16:17:52
It's OK for you, but I live at the far end of the interwebs and people from my neck of the woods don't seem to turn up on MATY much. Why did this one have to be a flouncer with no staying power  :-\


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 18, 13:23:30
It's OK for you, but I live at the far end of the interwebs and people from my neck of the woods don't seem to turn up on MATY much. Why did this one have to be a flouncer with no staying power  :-\

Hi y'all,  are the WMDs put away yet?  Well, the thread seems to have died a death since my 'flounce' as Space Cadet' so creatively put it,  so for your enjoyment I have returned to point more fingers at the grammatical idiosyncracies of US/UK English and also to point out the many grammatical and spelling mistakes made by the compadres on here which is ironic given the name of the thread.  Let me start with spacecadet who left a question mark off the end of her post.  An oversight I'm sure ;)   

Notice, I did not say 'off of' as the 'of' is totally superfluous, but this is yet another US grammatical idiosyncracy which I abhor.  Why are there so many in one language?  I much prefer the more natural 'outta' here as everyone knows that it is a contraction of 'out of" but 'off of' has me really puzzled. 

Whatever a troll is, I don't think I am one.   ;D  Or maybe one of you erudite people can enlighten those of us who don't know and then we will all know.

*Presses 'Post' before she changes her mind and deletes the post*



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Georgette on 2009 July 18, 14:51:12
I thought you were leaving?

Are you trying to get soup status?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: spaceface on 2009 July 18, 14:52:17
@ Audrey: If you google "internet troll" you can find information on what they are.

Don't bother trying to troll me, as I won't bite.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 18, 14:57:20
@ Audrey: If you google "internet troll" you can find information on what they are.

Don't bother trying to troll me, as I won't bite.

Hey, TSC (for short).  Where are you from?

Hi Lorelei, what's soup status?  If I have to eat soup, I'm exiting, stage left. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Georgette on 2009 July 18, 14:59:17
Actually it was me that accused you of souping.

Edited to show definition of souping:
Souped - Gain notability, then leave in (or due to) a dramabomb explosion. Bonus points if you say something to the effect of "I'M NEVER COMING BACK" and return 1 or 2 weeks later. Lips change to .


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 18, 15:04:09
From our good freind Wiki.  "A troll is someone who posts controversial, inflammatory, irrelevant or off-topic messages in an online community, such as an online discussion forum, chat room or collaborative content community with the primary intent of provoking other users into an emotional or disciplinary response[1] or to generally disrupt normal on-topic discussion."

Nope, that is definitely not I.  I tell it like I see it, not to provoke a particular response.  However, unintentionally, I may be found under the bridge.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Georgette on 2009 July 18, 15:06:40
Friend is spelt f-r-i-e-n-d.

And yes, you could be defined as a troll as you just keep trying to piss everyone off. I'll stop feeding the troll now in a hope you'll starve off.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 18, 15:11:35
Actually it was me that accused you of souping.

Edited to show definition of souping:
Souped - Gain notability, then leave in (or due to) a dramabomb explosion. Bonus points if you say something to the effect of "I'M NEVER COMING BACK" and return 1 or 2 weeks later. Lips change to .


Oops, sorry Georgette!

Well, I never said I was 'NEVER COMING BACK', but I hadn't really intended to post again, merely to lurk.   Couldn't resist returning so that I can practise becoming a troll, now that I know what one is.  ;)

Just read your post G.  I have always had trouble with that bloody word (frIend).  I even said to myself as I was typing it 'i before e.......' and still typed it incorrectly.  

Deep down in their hearts, every forum poster loves a troll because he/she makes threads interesting, so even though it was not my intention to troll, I do like to shake things up and get people thinking.

Feed me, don't feed me, not really bothered.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 18, 17:33:24
Audrey, what you need to do is go to the members' list, search for "Celestard" and then press "read latest posts". Depending on how stupid you are, 2-3 pages should do it. You could also try doing this with "rufio".


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 18, 20:38:22
You could also try doing this with "rufio".

I thought you had decided I was insane, not a troll?

Personally, I am perfectly willing to bet that Audrey is a genuinely xeonphobic linguistically ignorant dumbass rather than a troll.  God knows there's plenty of those around here already.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TheQuietOne on 2009 July 18, 20:45:09

This is like asking why the Romans decided to stop speaking Latin and start speaking Italian (was there something wrong with Latin?!!!!1111)

Romans? Italian? You might want to reconsider what you wrote because it is painfully wrong.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 18, 20:52:52

This is like asking why the Romans decided to stop speaking Latin and start speaking Italian (was there something wrong with Latin?!!!!1111)

Romans? Italian? You might want to reconsider what you wrote because it is painfully wrong.

Well, the current denizens of Rome do, in fact, speak Italian, and it's not like all of the Romans living in Rome were suddenly wiped out by a natural disaster and then replaced with people who were exactly the same except that they were now called "Italians".


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 19, 12:11:49
Quote
Personally, I am perfectly willing to bet that Audrey is a genuinely xeonphobic linguistically ignorant dumbass rather than a troll.  God knows there's plenty of those around here already.

Hey 'dumbass' yourself, Rufio. I have never insulted you 'personally', so why do you feel the need to insult me?  Now that is what I call trolling.  

If you bother to read back on my posts you may gather, from the standard of the English in them, that I am far from 'linguistically ignorant'.  Latin and French were two of my matric subjects and I did further studies in French and German, and English was one of my majors at University, so if you are going to insult me, try picking on things that I am not good at.  Sports? Now, I really suck at sports.

Actually, if I was xenophobic (not 'xeonphobic'. Pot, kettle springs to mind), that is, have an irrational fear of foreign places and things, I probably wouldn't have had the guts to live in South Africa, Ireland, Singapore, Australia, as well as holiday in the really scary parts of Britain, the US, Switzerland and Thailand.  

I notice scores of people took you up on your bet but I think you have lost your own bet. However here's something I would bet on - you haven't left the shores of US.  Surprise me!  

*Inflammatory observation warning*  (Could be considered troll-like, but isn't).

I have had the pleasure, seriously, of traversing your lovely country and I am afraid that I have not come across a more ignorant, insular and xenophobic nation regarding things foreign.  I mean, seriously, I was asked on more than one occasion, aren't I afraid of the wild animals that roam our 'African' streets??????  There seems to be no knowledge of the distinction between the continent of Africa and the various countries which make up the whole.  

In my opinion and generally-speaking, American general knowledge about things beyond their own little American world is woeful. But, let me not be unfair, our Australian and UK cousins are nearly as bad.

Xenophobic? No.  Critical?  Yes.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 19, 15:14:22
There are plenty, and I mean *plenty*, of South Africans who are just as ignorant of what goes on outside SA's borders, and particularly within America's, as there are Americans with small worldviews.  On a daily basis, I meet people who paint the very large country that is the USA with one broad brush, as if a few singular instances of ignorance define the entire country.  How small minded is that?  

Of the South Africans I've met, I'd say 75% have never been stepped foot off the continent.  Some of the ones I've met have little concept that there's a difference between America and Canada.  A significant portion have a negative view of America and its citizens in general based on no personal experience whatsoever, and always express surprise at the fact that I turn out not to be a loud, obnoxious, Hawaiian shirt-wearing buffoon who only knows how to talk about guns and beer.  

If I take off my shoes, I can count the number of people that I haven't heard used racial slurs (even cleverly disguised ones) or who don't treat black people differently than white people. Yet I manage not to make sweeping generalizations that the lot of South Africa is composed of ignorant, racist idiots who all wear light blue and khaki shirts with dark blue pockets.  Funny how that works.

But of course, I am just one American out of many.  I wouldn't expect people to base their opinion of my country on their experiences with me.  That would just be stupid.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: spaceface on 2009 July 19, 15:48:40
I South Africa and there are wild animals roaming in the streets AS I WRITE. Don't believe anyone who tells you otherwise.

However, sweeping generalizations FTL. Trolls, the lot of you. Pah.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 19, 16:10:19
Here's something you obviously missed in your vaunted education:

Hey 'dumbass' yourself, Rufio. I have never insulted you 'personally' <snip>

Wrapping something in single quotes is not a proper way to emphasize. Quotes are for quotation of exact speech or text, or to imply that the chosen word is dubious in its usage.

Cut that shit out, or I'll have to beat you over the head with Fowler (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fowler%27s_Modern_English_Usage). Watch out, because even my paperback copy weighs a good two pounds.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 19, 17:59:29
Here's something you obviously missed in your vaunted education:

Hey 'dumbass' yourself, Rufio. I have never insulted you 'personally' <snip>

Wrapping something in single quotes is not a proper way to emphasize. Quotes are for quotation of exact speech or text, or to imply that the chosen word is dubious in its usage.

Cut that shit out, or I'll have to beat you over the head with Fowler (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fowler%27s_Modern_English_Usage). Watch out, because even my paperback copy weighs a good two pounds.

CC, if you read Rufio's original post, you will see that he starts it with 'Personally', so I was quoting him, not emphasizing.  I am aware with my 'vaunted education' that if I wanted to emphasize something, I would bold it.   ;)

And I would have to counter beat you over the head with my hardcopy Oxford Dictionary which surely beats your Fowler. ;D

Roflganger, generalisations are odious and I don't usually indulge in them.   I totally agree about the average South African who is equally at fault when it comes to knowledge about people and places in other countries.   

TSC, you make me laugh.  ;D 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 19, 18:04:36
I South Africa and there are wild animals roaming in the streets AS I WRITE. Don't believe anyone who tells you otherwise.

However, sweeping generalizations FTL. Trolls, the lot of you. Pah.

I've got bush babies in my yard as I write - does that count as wildlife?  

Again, I was NOT making sweeping generalizations about South Africans in general based on the experiences I've had with some.  That was my whole point. My experiences are just down to where I live and the people I happen to have to deal with.  I have never said, and will never say "Fuck, South Africans are an insular lot.  They don't even know the difference between the US and Canada!"

I don't assume that the whole country matches the descriptions I gave just because most of the people I come into contact with happen to.  Hell, I live here entirely voluntarily; if I felt that way about this country's people, I would have left a long time ago.  I was just pointing out that the few experiences Audrey had in America exist everywhere, even in South Africa.

I just wish other people would use the same filter when judging Americans.  A person's experiences with a limited few Americans do not accurately describe the mindset, outlook or attitudes of all Americans.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 19, 18:16:21
I South Africa and there are wild animals roaming in the streets AS I WRITE. Don't believe anyone who tells you otherwise.

However, sweeping generalizations FTL. Trolls, the lot of you. Pah.

I've got bush babies in my yard as I write - does that count as wildlife?  

Again, I was NOT making sweeping generalizations about South Africans in general based on the experiences I've had with some.  That was my whole point. My experiences are just down to where I live and the people I happen to have to deal with.  I have never said, and will never say "Fuck, South Africans are an insular lot.  They don't even know the difference between the US and Canada!"

I don't assume that the whole country matches the descriptions I gave just because most of the people I come into contact with happen to.  Hell, I live here entirely voluntarily; if I felt that way about this country's people, I would have left a long time ago.  I was just pointing out that the few experiences Audrey had in America exist everywhere, even in South Africa.

I just wish other people would use the same filter when judging Americans.  A person's experiences with a limited few Americans do not accurately describe the mindset, outlook or attitudes of all Americans.

The trouble is that Americans are more under the spotlight than people from other countries due to the amount of TV that comes from there.  Therefore, one does build up a picture, which could be classed as a generalisation, that is based on the perceptions which are gleaned from TV.  For example, people would be forgiven if they assumed that a lot of Americans were weight-challenged, based on what is portrayed on TV.   There are many, many other generalisations that could be made based on the 'facts' as portrayed by that medium. 

As the second-largest English-speaking exporter, one would be forgiven for thinking that England has a bunch of yobbos who have bad teeth and only wash once a week.   Television is a powerful medium which leads to an outsider making generalisations about a particular population group. 



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 19, 18:24:24
So, one can be forgiven for buying into the image of rotten-teethed Brits because they saw it on TV, but not for thinking "Africa" is filled with wild, street-roaming animals because they saw it on TV?  Making snap judgments about people = acceptable; having a misconception about a country's features = abhorrent.  

Go figure.

And from where I stand, one can NOT be forgiven for buying into the stereotypes portrayed in the media once one is beyond the age of about 8 6 and presumably has developed enough of an independent mind to realize that TV does not even attempt to accurately reflect reality, and that stereotypes suck.

ETA:  By the way, the idea that the concept of Americans as loudmouthed fat slobs comes FROM American TV seems a bit absurd.  If anything, people basing their opinions of America solely on the basis of what they see in American-made TV shows would likely come away with the opinion that all Americans are thin, beautiful and rich.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 19, 18:37:32
But, you don't see wild animals roaming the streets in South Africa, so no, I really can't forgive that bit of ignorance.  

I think that what one sees on TV can distort but can also give a true reflection of what a society is like.  Let's face it, there are a lot of Brits who don't put such store by having a perfect set of pearly whites.  By the same token, around 40% (I could be off by a few percent) of Americans are overweight.  Now, I have not had personal experience of this, but from what is portrayed, I think these perceptions hold true.   I think there is such a diversity of people portrayed on TV, that the stereotype of the loud, aggressive American has fallen by the wayside.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 19, 18:52:10
You, sir, are an idiot. You can't argue on the that stereotypes and common wisdoms are true of USistanis and not true of Hairybacks like yourself.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 July 19, 19:07:35
But, you don't see wild animals roaming the streets in South Africa, so no, I really can't forgive that bit of ignorance.
I dunno. It depends on how you define "wild animals". The swarms of muggers, rapists, and assorted hooligans and thugs may very well qualify as wildlife.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 19, 19:27:30
But, you don't see wild animals roaming the streets in South Africa, so no, I really can't forgive that bit of ignorance.
I dunno. It depends on how you define "wild animals". The swarms of muggers, rapists, and assorted hooligans and thugs may very well qualify as wildlife.

Now, that is as true an observation as I have ever seen.  Probably based on media-watching and not on experience. ;)

Rohina, I want what you're smoking.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 19, 20:17:47
Says a lot about the sharpness of your mind if you believe everything you see on TV.

Your high horse is very pretty.  May I pet him?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 19, 20:40:32
Rohina, I want what you're smoking.

What? You are saying you are not a hairyback?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 19, 21:05:10
Says a lot about the sharpness of your mind if you believe everything you see on TV.

Your high horse is very pretty.  May I pet him?

Nay, Dr.  I'm pretty picky about who pets my horse. You wouldn't be able to reach it, anyway.

Did I say I believe EVERYTHING I see on TV? 

Quote
What? You are saying you are not a hairyback?

Only if I don't shave it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 19, 21:46:02
Here's something you obviously missed in your vaunted education:
Hey 'dumbass' yourself, Rufio. I have never insulted you 'personally' <snip>
Wrapping something in single quotes is not a proper way to emphasize...
CC, if you read Rufio's original post, you will see that he starts it with 'Personally', so I was quoting him, not emphasizing.  I am aware with my 'vaunted education' that if I wanted to emphasize something, I would bold it.   ;)

And I would have to counter beat you over the head with my hardcopy Oxford Dictionary which surely beats your Fowler. ;D

While you're playing "Whose is bigger?" with your reference materials, Audrey, a self-proclaimed "purist" like yourself might take a moment to look up how to quote someone. Hint: it's done with quotation marks, hence their catchy name. The use of an apostrophe or "single quote" to mark a quotation is occasionally recognized, but such a choice would hardly befit anyone attempting to present herself as a linguistic purist.

For bonus points you might also note that rufio's name is not capitalized. You have made this error at least twice.

Neither of these mistakes is especially heinous; in fact, either can be explained as a stylistic choice. And deviating from proper grammar can be quite effective stylistically. However, if one is going to declare herself an authority on the right and proper use of the English language, she might be aware that making such rudimentary mistakes (even if she wishes to claim she did so "on purpose") will leave her looking more prat than purist.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TheQuietOne on 2009 July 19, 22:04:32
I think that what one sees on TV can distort but can also give a true reflection of what a society is like.  Let's face it, there are a lot of Brits who don't put such store by having a perfect set of pearly whites.  By the same token, around 40% (I could be off by a few percent) of Americans are overweight.  Now, I have not had personal experience of this, but from what is portrayed, I think these perceptions hold true.   I think there is such a diversity of people portrayed on TV, that the stereotype of the loud, aggressive American has fallen by the wayside.

You might want to cut down on your TV time and engage yourself in some radical activity like, hmm, reading.
McLuhan or Baudrillard would be a good start.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 19, 22:22:48
Did I say I believe EVERYTHING I see on TV? 

Oh, so you only believe the stuff that conforms to your preconceived stereotypes.  Yeah, that's totally different.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 20, 11:04:20
Quote
Neither of these mistakes is especially heinous; in fact, either can be explained as a stylistic choice. And deviating from proper grammar can be quite effective stylistically. However, if one is going to declare herself an authority on the right and proper use of the English language, she might be aware that making such rudimentary mistakes (even if she wishes to claim she did so "on purpose") will leave her looking more prat than purist.

I could rebut the above and pick out all your glaring grammatical errors but, quite frankly, I couldn't be arsed. 

Can I please stop being the butt of conversation around here?  Don't you have somebody else to play with?



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 July 20, 11:29:06
Now, that is as true an observation as I have ever seen.  Probably based on media-watching and not on experience. ;)
Actually, I've been there and encountered it personally.

There are plenty, and I mean *plenty*, of South Africans who are just as ignorant of what goes on outside SA's borders, and particularly within America's, as there are Americans with small worldviews.  On a daily basis, I meet people who paint the very large country that is the USA with one broad brush, as if a few singular instances of ignorance define the entire country.  How small minded is that?
Well, you have to remember: A group is always represented by its worst members. This is the rule. It doesn't matter that any individual member you may have encountered doesn't necessarily exhibit all of the worst behaviors, the fact remains that any group is represented by its worst members. That's just how things work: Whenever you evaluate something, you ALWAYS take the worst impression so as to maintain a balanced view of things. All those other instances are just statistical anomalies.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: spaceface on 2009 July 20, 12:17:06
This is MATY. Noobs get sporked if they draw attention to themselves. I must say though, I never saw one give herself a schtick quite so efficiently before.

As far as South Africans' perception of the USA is concerned, it bears noting that one of, if not the, most popular USA TV show over here is a soap opera called "The Bold and The Beautiful". If anyone believes what they see on TV, I would love to know what they make of that.

Regarding the animals, for the record, there was a baboon in the road where I live, albeit last year more or less. It came from a forest nearby, my brother-in-law saw it. Other suburbs of Cape Town regularly get terrorized by maurauding troops. Google "Cape Town baboon" and some links will come up. On the other hand, flocks of cows and goats being informally pastured on the verges right next to the N2 freeway are an everyday occurrence.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 20, 12:29:59
Well, you have to remember: A group is always represented by its worst members. This is the rule. It doesn't matter that any individual member you may have encountered doesn't necessarily exhibit all of the worst behaviors, the fact remains that any group is represented by its worst members. That's just how things work: Whenever you evaluate something, you ALWAYS take the worst impression so as to maintain a balanced view of things. All those other instances are just statistical anomalies.

Even with that yardstick in play, even the worst Americans are no worse than the worst citizens of any other countries, so everyone should still end up on fairly equal footing.  It's the people who compare the worst of one country with the best of another and (unsurprisingly) come away with unfavorable conclusions that I would like to see DIAF, is my point.  

Regarding the animals, for the record, there was a baboon in the road where I live, albeit last year more or less. It came from a forest nearby, my brother-in-law saw it. Other suburbs of Cape Town regularly get terrorized by maurauding troops. Google "Cape Town baboon" and some links will come up. On the other hand, flocks of cows and goats being informally pastured on the verges right next to the N2 freeway are an everyday occurrence.

What I think many South Africans forget is that from some perspectives, South Africa *does* have wildlife roaming in the streets.  There's the aforementioned bush babies in my yard, the baboon that your brother in law saw, or the one that I saw a few months ago.  There are sections of road nearby where meerkats will gleefully run in front of your car to see how hard they can make you swerve.  When I lived in Cape Town, I'd take a morning walk to see the seals playing in the surf, or stand amongst the penguins just to feel tall for a while.  To most people I know, that's about as wild as you get.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: originalhalf on 2009 July 20, 12:50:28
As far as South Africans' perception of the USA is concerned, it bears noting that one of, if not the, most popular USA TV show over here is a soap opera called "The Bold and The Beautiful". If anyone believes what they see on TV, I would love to know what they make of that.

That is disturbing as all get out.  I've been watching Y&R since I was 10 6 and can't bring myself to watch B&B.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Kyna on 2009 July 20, 13:14:45
Can I please stop being the butt of conversation around here?  Don't you have somebody else to play with?

Stop posting pokeworthy stuff, and we'll stop poking.

Yes, it really is that simple.  But you'd be surprised how many tards don't get it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 July 20, 13:18:33
What I think many South Africans forget is that from some perspectives, South Africa *does* have wildlife roaming in the streets.  There's the aforementioned bush babies in my yard, the baboon that your brother in law saw, or the one that I saw a few months ago.  There are sections of road nearby where meerkats will gleefully run in front of your car to see how hard they can make you swerve.
Yeah, but that's really no different from many parts of North America. Over here, we have bears that break into people's houses and raid fridges, raccoons that rob trash cans, the everpresent roadkill possums, deer that habitually mangle cars in collisions, bobcats and coyotes that make off with small housepets, and bats. Just because some Americans are more used to these animals doesn't make them any less wild! It's just as valid to say by these standards that Americans ALSO have wildlife roaming the streets.

Even with that yardstick in play, even the worst Americans are no worse than the worst citizens of any other countries, so everyone should still end up on fairly equal footing.  It's the people who compare the worst of one country with the best of another and (unsurprisingly) come away with unfavorable conclusions that I would like to see DIAF, is my point.
Humans all suck. I say we kill them all. Although I do have to say one thing: Violent thugs in South Africa are generally a lot less pleasant than the ones in the US. On the other hand, the authorities complain less when I incinerate them with flamethrower, so I call that a win for South Africa. A man gets a lot less hassle for simply defending his own ass, and frankly, I consider South Africa a safer place to be. Sure, there's a lot more crime and violence, but no one complains if you do something about it.

Can I please stop being the butt of conversation around here?  Don't you have somebody else to play with?
(http://cats.moreawesomethanyou.com/stopposting.jpg)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 20, 13:37:28
I can't believe you guys forgot the stereotype where there is a violent regime change once a month.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 July 20, 13:39:38
Cut that shit out, or I'll have to beat you over the head with Fowler (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fowler%27s_Modern_English_Usage). Watch out, because even my paperback copy weighs a good two pounds.

And I would have to counter beat you over the head with my hardcopy Oxford Dictionary which surely beats your Fowler. ;D

Ummm ... I think you missed something there.  Fowler is the standard guide to English grammar for the, eh, English.  Oxford is good but Fowler is generally better when it comes to English usage with Fowler being specifically a book on usage and the other being a dictionary.  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: spaceface on 2009 July 20, 14:15:42
I can't believe you guys forgot the stereotype where there is a violent regime change once a month.

That's not South Africa. We have general elections where the guys who hand out the most T-shirts win, fair and square. Then the media complain that the T-shirts were made in China. ::)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 20, 14:28:38
Oh, well, thanks for taking that in stride, then. =D


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 20, 14:49:33
It's just as valid to say by these standards that Americans ALSO have wildlife roaming the streets.

Indeed. Where I live, it's usually turtles, iguanas (non-native but their population has exploded), alligators, opossums and armadillos, in addition to the occasional raccoon. It's all relative. Anyone who says alligators aren't "wild" animals should probably be introduced to several, at once.

Ummm ... I think you missed something there.  Fowler is the standard guide to English grammar for the, eh, English.  Oxford is good but Fowler is generally better when it comes to English usage with Fowler being specifically a book on usage and the other being a dictionary. 

Thank you for noticing.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 20, 16:45:46
Can I please stop being the butt of conversation around here?  Don't you have somebody else to play with?

Sweetie, people are being quite tolerant of you. Also, you don't get to tell us what to do.

Oh, and about the wildlife, I used to live in a Australia, where kangaroos roamed the golf course, and now I live in Canada, where random bears wander in to hospitals.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 20, 22:15:43
I live in Canada, where random bears wander in to hospitals.

Do they have insurance?

Oh, wait, that's right: nationalized health care. Silly me.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 July 20, 22:31:23
Cut that shit out, or I'll have to beat you over the head with Fowler (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fowler%27s_Modern_English_Usage). Watch out, because even my paperback copy weighs a good two pounds.

And I would have to counter beat you over the head with my hardcopy Oxford Dictionary which surely beats your Fowler. ;D

Ummm ... I think you missed something there.  Fowler is the standard guide to English grammar for the, eh, English.  Oxford is good but Fowler is generally better when it comes to English usage with Fowler being specifically a book on usage and the other being a dictionary.  

*throws a Roget's Thesaurus into the mix for good measure*

As for animals roaming the streets in SA, I once counted 84 sizeable piles of dung on the road during a particularly boring 2 hour car journey there. Make of that what you will.

I'm totally jealous of all these exciting critters you guys all seem inundated with. All we have here in blighty is the occaisional fox and a smattering of pheasants. Oh, and on the subject of my homeland, I totally take offence at that jibe out our dental hygiene Audrey.** Watch out or I'll be sending round the football holligans to sort you out.

**Besides, everyone knows that it's Scotland's where the truly atrocious teeth are. It's all that tablet and fried Mars bar they're so fond of.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 20, 22:57:04
Oh, hey, Soozel. We used to have a WOMBAT who lived in the front yard of our beach house.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 July 20, 23:09:41
Oh, hey, Soozel. We used to have a WOMBAT who lived in the front yard of our beach house.

Aww, man rub it in why don't you? I hope you didn't engage him in any form of mortal combat.

I found some exciting looking fox poo today. Oh, and there's a daddy-long-legs on the windowsill. David Attenborough eat your heart out.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: chaos on 2009 July 21, 01:33:04
I'd prefer foxes and pheasants to pigeons that shit on my doormat and feral cats that pee on my car.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 21, 02:02:24
When I lived in Arizona, we used to get coyotes in the neighborhood from time to time.  The ones that show up in the city are usually pretty pathetic, though - one of them was actually chased off by a neighbor's cat.  My friend who lived in a significantly less urban area said she saw a javalina once, though.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 July 21, 03:21:08
Birthplace wild animals were mostly deer and Canadian geese. I almost walked right up to a woodchuck once...those things are nasty mean. There aren't a lot of stray dogs or cats or ferals except towards the farmland, where a lot of farmers get a few unfixed cats to mouse their barns and then leave them to fend for themselves.

Here there are a lot of strays and ferals. I usually see a feral about once every two weeks. I've seen one rat in the twelve years I've been here. There are a lot of coons, too. In my old subhood, there was this one huge coon that was holed up in the side yard of this home where they left bags of leaves there for ages. He pretty much minded his own business, but it was clear that he considered that his territory, and he would guard it.

Of course, both my hometown and Chicago are teeming with bunnies and squirrels. The ones in my hometown are almost all black. The ones here are more grey and brown and are freaking huge.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 21, 03:28:35
Actually, we saw a lot of rock squirrels in AZ too, but I think they would be classified more as pests than as wildlife, since most of the time they were chewing holes in the crawlspace and then trying to flay us alive when we finally caught them in a live trap.  The rock squirrels are a dull greyish brown in color, and about the same shape as a ferret, but smaller.  I briefly went up to Iowa for school, and was surprised to encounter chestnut-colored squirrels with big fluffy tails about the size of small cats.  Between that and the bright green vegitation, it was like stepping into a coloring book.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 21, 06:27:24
How many posts do you have to make to stop being a 'Noob'? 

Pescado, I didn't know you had visited our sunny shores.  I hope your 'experience' wasn't too bad.  Our local thugs are pretty hardcore and you don't always escape with your life. 

There's only a violent regime change, every OTHER month.

Sounds like there is a lot more wildlife roaming the streets, elsewhere, than there is in our game parks!!

'Stop posting'. Now, that would not be fun.

Has anyone seen an 'offering' from Canadian TV called 'This is Wonderland'?  It is about a new lawyer who gets thrown into the thick of the Canadian lower courts system.  It is so off-the-wall and portrays the court system in such a 'wacky' way compared to what I am accustomed to seeing in shows like 'Boston Legal', that it is difficult to believe that what goes on in those courts and cells is really true.  You would have to have seen it to know what I'm talking about.








Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: witch on 2009 July 21, 06:48:26
How many posts do you have to make to stop being a 'Noob'? 

Pescado, I didn't know you had visited our sunny shores.  I hope your 'experience' wasn't too bad.  Our local thugs are pretty hardcore and you don't always escape with your life. 

Yeah, are you all right JM? You poor defenceless crittur, you?

Audrey, you stop being a n00b when you get SOME idea of the people and the place, just like anywhere else.

I suspect sock. Or Boer arrogance. Or both.

*witch hedges her bets


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 21, 07:25:57
Don't know what is meant by 'sock' and definitely not Boer arrogance - I'm as English as they come.  I'm slowly getting the drift about how things work on here and the golden rule seems to be 'don't insult Americans' or the fires of hell will rise up to meet you, or you might meet witch on a dark and stormy night. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: witch on 2009 July 21, 07:28:36
Don't know what is meant by 'sock' and definitely not Boer arrogance - I'm as English as they come.  I'm slowly getting the drift about how things work on here and the golden rule seems to be 'don't insult Americans' or the fires of hell will rise up to meet you, or you might meet witch on a dark and stormy night. 

Yeah, well, we're not keen on passive aggression, either.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 July 21, 07:46:14
Here there are a lot of strays and ferals. I usually see a feral about once every two weeks. I've seen one rat in the twelve years I've been here.
Yeah, it should be pretty obvious what is happening to the rats. At times in the past, people have decided that feral cats are unsightly and tried to get rid of them, only to find that they were rewarded for their efforts with an exploding rat problem, and then had to reimport the cats.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 21, 07:46:40
How many posts do you have to make to stop being a 'Noob'?

That's like asking how much the lobster is. Go ahead and get comfy in n00b-land. You're not leaving it anytime soon.

Yeah, well, we're not keen on passive aggression, either.
Too right, witch. We like our aggression out in the open.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 21, 07:54:12
Don't know what is meant by 'sock' and definitely not Boer arrogance - I'm as English as they come.  I'm slowly getting the drift about how things work on here and the golden rule seems to be 'don't insult Americans' or the fires of hell will rise up to meet you, or you might meet witch on a dark and stormy night. 

I think you'll find people here are all for insulting Americans, as long as your insults actually make sense, and don't boil down to "Everyone in <foreign country> speaks weird!  I don't like it!"


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 21, 07:55:41
Don't know what is meant by 'sock' and definitely not Boer arrogance - I'm as English as they come.  I'm slowly getting the drift about how things work on here and the golden rule seems to be 'don't insult Americans' or the fires of hell will rise up to meet you, or you might meet witch on a dark and stormy night. 

One way to shake the sock/tard label would be to show an actual interest elsewhere in the forum, rather than sticking to the spot where you're getting all this "unwanted" attention.

And I can't speak for anyone else, but I would react this way to any stupid generalizations, not just those against Americans.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 21, 08:08:46
Don't know what is meant by 'sock' and definitely not Boer arrogance - I'm as English as they come.  I'm slowly getting the drift about how things work on here and the golden rule seems to be 'don't insult Americans' or the fires of hell will rise up to meet you, or you might meet witch on a dark and stormy night. 

Dude, you can insult the USistanis all you like. Just don't be an ass, and if you are going to try to flop out your academic dick, make sure it isn't a tiddler.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 21, 08:28:29
Taking points made on board.   ;D


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 July 21, 15:19:38
Here there are a lot of strays and ferals. I usually see a feral about once every two weeks. I've seen one rat in the twelve years I've been here.
Yeah, it should be pretty obvious what is happening to the rats. At times in the past, people have decided that feral cats are unsightly and tried to get rid of them, only to find that they were rewarded for their efforts with an exploding rat problem, and then had to reimport the cats.
I know, right? I leave the ferals be. I have a feral myself, and I know how hard they can be to have as a pet (and mine is a shy feral, not a mean one). Plus, they're helping with the rat population. They always look nice and healthy. The rare strays are the ones I try to catch. I've had a stray dog that had just run off from down the block but was trying its damnedest to get run over, which I was able to get back to its owners that night. I also had a stray cat that I kept for a couple days back when I only had Soren. No ID on it and I had a studio at the time, so that one had to go to Anti-Cruelty.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 21, 15:43:48
Quote
Too right, witch. We like our aggression out in the open.

Aggression knocked out of me by Fowler, Oxford and Roget.  But, I'll get it back. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 21, 15:46:48
Just remember, you can talk bad about Americans, as long as you make sense. Bitching about how American English is different than British English is what got you in trouble. Of COURSE they're different. DIFFERENT LANGUAGES, sweetheart. Did you notice how no one jumped down your throat for the "lazy and fat Americans" comments?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: reggikko on 2009 July 21, 15:58:43
Just remember, you can talk bad about Americans, as long as you make sense. Bitching about how American English is different than British English is what got you in trouble. Of COURSE they're different. DIFFERENT LANGUAGES, sweetheart. Did you notice how no one jumped down your throat for the "lazy and fat Americans" comments?

Or the "my darker-hued compatriots" butchering the language comment. I almost went for a smackdown on that one, but I was busy with other matters.

How many posts do you have to make to stop being a 'Noob'

Pescado, I didn't know you had visited our sunny shores.  I hope your 'experience' wasn't too bad.  Our local thugs are pretty hardcore and you don't always escape with your life. 

There's only a violent regime change, every OTHER month.

Sounds like there is a lot more wildlife roaming the streets, elsewhere, than there is in our game parks!!

'Stop posting'. Now, that would not be fun.

Has anyone seen an 'offering' from Canadian TV called 'This is Wonderland'?  It is about a new lawyer who gets thrown into the thick of the Canadian lower courts system.  It is so off-the-wall and portrays the court system in such a 'wacky' way compared to what I am accustomed to seeing in shows like 'Boston Legal', that it is difficult to believe that what goes on in those courts and cells is really true.  You would have to have seen it to know what I'm talking about.

That shit has got to stop. Now.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 21, 16:38:02
It's news to me that they are different, different languages.  Italian is different, different language to Japanese, but US English and UK English have the same intrinsic base, except the US has chosen to go in another direction with some of the spelling, notably the dropping of the 'u' in words such as labour.  I would love someone to admit that saying "I don't like ice-cream", said Jane. "Me either", said Dick,  is grammatically incorrect, yet this is something that is very prevalent in teen American speech (from what I have heard on TV).  

South Africa has its fair share of the incorrect use of language, like 'taking' a decision, instead of 'making' one. I cringe at every time I hear it.  Every other 'English-based' country uses the latter.  Does this make South African English 'different'?  No, it has become the norm in SA speech with constant misuse.  

I think you all had a bunch of fun bashing the newbie, admit it, you did.  Anyway, water under bridge, clean slate, yada, yada, yada.  



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 21, 16:39:59
Just remember, you can talk bad about Americans, as long as you make sense. Bitching about how American English is different than British English is what got you in trouble. Of COURSE they're different. DIFFERENT LANGUAGES, sweetheart. Did you notice how no one jumped down your throat for the "lazy and fat Americans" comments?

Or the "my darker-hued compatriots" butchering the language comment. I almost went for a smackdown on that one, but I was busy with other matters.

How many posts do you have to make to stop being a 'Noob'?  

Pescado, I didn't know you had visited our sunny shores.  I hope your 'experience' wasn't too bad.  Our local thugs are pretty hardcore and you don't always escape with your life.  

There's only a violent regime change, every OTHER month.

Sounds like there is a lot more wildlife roaming the streets, elsewhere, than there is in our game parks!!

'Stop posting'. Now, that would not be fun.

Has anyone seen an 'offering' from Canadian TV called 'This is Wonderland'?  It is about a new lawyer who gets thrown into the thick of the Canadian lower courts system.  It is so off-the-wall and portrays the court system in such a 'wacky' way compared to what I am accustomed to seeing in shows like 'Boston Legal', that it is difficult to believe that what goes on in those courts and cells is really true.  You would have to have seen it to know what I'm talking about.

That shit has got to stop. Now.


Excuse me??????? wtf are you implying?.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 21, 16:41:42
Stop over-using the sarcastic quotes. If you're going to be proper about tv show titles, they're UNDERLINED.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 21, 16:44:58
FYI, Jelendra, they were not sarcastic comments in any way, shape or form.  Everyone on here seems hellbent on bashing the hell out of me.  Maybe I deserved it, but I really don't get this poster above's aggression.  I have always used single quote marks for names of TV shows, so bite me.  

Oh, you know what, this is really becoming not fun.  I was trying to make conversation about a TV show which I really enjoyed and I get this shit.  You can all really go to hell.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 21, 17:39:31
What Jordi said. Don't use them for everything. You were asked earlier in the thread to knock it out, Zazazu Reggikko was just pointing out HOW MANY FREAKING TIMES you used them in one post.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 21, 17:42:56
The 'frequency' with which Audrey sets off 'special' words with 'apostrophes' or 'single quotes' is an especially tedious affectation, given her 'claims' to be a linguistic/grammatical 'purist'.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 21, 17:45:05
Yes, no grammatical reason to set off offering, experience, OR wacky; unless you were being sarcastic. So why, if they were not meant to be sarcastic, were you single quoting random shit?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 21, 17:48:01
Actually, Jelly is right about underlining TV shows - if you are talking about a specific episode of one show, it would go in quotes, but the name of the show is underlined.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 21, 17:51:18
Episode title-wise, italics is a commonly excepted too, isn't it? TV show bold, episode title in italic?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 21, 17:54:32
Episode title-wise, italics is a commonly excepted too, isn't it? TV show bold, episode title in italic?

You let being right once go to your head. Italics are the same as underlining, so either is correct for the show title, but not both. Also not correct is quotation marks and italics. Bold is not a standard typographic indicator for titles.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 21, 17:57:29
Ah, I was thinking of TV Guide print here. They bold the show title and put the episode name in quotes. I really shouldn't have expected TV Guide to be an indicator of grammatical correctness.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 July 21, 18:13:29
Bold is not a standard typographic indicator for titles.

I've seen Bold used for lots of TV show titles. The Guardian (UK newspaper) for instance uses this format in its TV guide.

ETA: Jelly may disparage tv guides as evidence of correct grammar usage, but presumably The Guardian has a style guide it adheres to throughout its publications. Perhaops it's not the best example, but it's lying open in front of me so it sprang to mind swiftly.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 21, 18:22:32
I had seen it done, so I assumed (I know) that there might've been an exception for it. Perhaps it's merely how they chose to format their guides. *shrugs*


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 21, 18:41:56
This confusion is one of my irritations at the notion that every publication or academic entity must develop its own "style." I remember back in school we were told to use AMA style for our term papers. Then of course on the school newspaper we had our own style manual. Later I had to use APA style for my papers in psychology. The weekly free newspaper I briefly contributed to was a subsidiary-of-a-subsidary of the Tribune company, so they had their own style.

Most often, style is only relevant to person titles and names, or if needed, references. So, why is it that every freaking group on the planet seems to think it's perfectly acceptable to develop their own rules regarding bolding, underlining, italicizing, capitalization, and quotation? Can't they all just pick one fucking set of rules and agree upon it? Or does that not let them feel special enough?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Zazazu on 2009 July 21, 20:14:19
What Jordi said. Don't use them for everything. You were asked earlier in the thread to knock it out, Zazazu was just pointing out HOW MANY FREAKING TIMES you used them in one post.
Am I on your mind, Jelly? It was Reggikko.

I've always thought of British English and American English as extreme dialects. More correctly, American English would be the extreme dialect of British English. As such, I'd as soon tease someone for typing "labour" as I would a Southerner for calling a bag a poke. They are all valid versions.

I lucked out. For almost all of my courses in middle school, high school, and college, we used APA.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 21, 23:18:20
It's news to me that they are different, different languages.  Italian is different, different language to Japanese, but US English and UK English have the same intrinsic base, except the US has chosen to go in another direction with some of the spelling, notably the dropping of the 'u' in words such as labour.  I would love someone to admit that saying "I don't like ice-cream", said Jane. "Me either", said Dick,  is grammatically incorrect, yet this is something that is very prevalent in teen American speech (from what I have heard on TV).  

They are different dialects, and yes, this means they have different rules.  The line between what is a "different dialect" and what is a "different language" is actually rather fine at points.  See also AAVE (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_American_Vernacular_English), and Scots (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scots_language).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 July 21, 23:27:58
APA - I had to look that up.  mmmm.  I have to use my own university's referencing system for my PhD (nearly completed, submitting soon (please god)) but have to use Harvard at the university where I am currently teaching and prefer to use a bastardised version of Chicago which I have developed to suit myself (look, it makes sense to me).  I started using Chicago for preference after I submitted papers for publication to a couple of journals that use it.  Sigh.  Nightmare really and partly of my own making.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: reggikko on 2009 July 21, 23:38:05
The 'frequency' with which Audrey sets off 'special' words with 'apostrophes' or 'single quotes' is an especially tedious affectation, given her 'claims' to be a linguistic/grammatical 'purist'.

Yes, this is the source of my 'aggression'. It is 'irritating' to read a post that is 'littered' with 'misplaced' single quotes and 'errant' apostrophes. I don't think Audrey will be getting her shiny Grammar Police badge anytime soon.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 22, 13:24:35
@Zazazu: You are always on my mind. *waggles eyebrows*


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jack Rudd on 2009 July 22, 15:35:38
There is an important difference between paper and internet documents when it comes to underlining; an underline on a piece of paper cannot be indicating a hyperlink. For this reason, I would probably advise against the use of underlines for internet documents.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 22, 16:42:29
There is an important difference between paper and internet documents when it comes to underlining; an underline on a piece of paper cannot be indicating a hyperlink. For this reason, I would probably advise against the use of underlines for internet documents.

Well, this is true; it is also unnecessary to make print out web addresses in blue on essays and other documents. No matter how hard I poke the paper, it does not transport me to the relevant website.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 July 22, 17:10:32
...it is also unnecessary to make print out web addresses in blue on essays and other documents. No matter how hard I poke the paper, it does not transport me to the relevant website.

You've tried this, have you?  I was waiting for any reportage as to its efficacy, before admitting anything.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 22, 17:36:54
it is also unnecessary to make print out web addresses in blue on essays and other documents. No matter how hard I poke the paper, it does not transport me to the relevant website.

Ugh, another peeve of mine. Minor issue, yes, but everyone seems to just leave MS Word set to all its (obnoxious) default options, then they fail to clean up after its idiosyncrasies when printing out their crapola. I have to look at blue underlined garbage in official documents at work because of people's laziness. If one is trying to emphasize text that is to be typed into a computer interface, one may use a slightly different (preferably sans-serif) font for that text. But polluting documents with extraneous coloring and formatting is eye-abusive and lame.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 22, 17:53:13
...it is also unnecessary to make print out web addresses in blue on essays and other documents. No matter how hard I poke the paper, it does not transport me to the relevant website.

You've tried this, have you?  I was waiting for any reportage as to its efficacy, before admitting anything.

I generally try it as a comedy routine in class, to mock the retards who wasted coloured ink.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Stitches on 2009 July 22, 21:56:54
Minor issue, yes, but everyone seems to just leave MS Word set to all its (obnoxious) default options, then they fail to clean up after its idiosyncrasies when printing out their crapola.

I find myself increasingly more frustrated each semester that my professors waste time explaining to students how to reset their default margins in MS Word to MLA standards.

I have also considering refusing to read any assignment that isn't in 11 pt. Arial font when I become a teacher. Death to serifs.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 July 22, 22:19:33
Minor issue, yes, but everyone seems to just leave MS Word set to all its (obnoxious) default options, then they fail to clean up after its idiosyncrasies when printing out their crapola.

I find myself increasingly more frustrated each semester that my professors waste time explaining to students how to reset their default margins in MS Word to MLA standards.

I have also considering refusing to read any assignment that isn't in 11 pt. Arial font when I become a teacher. Death to serifs.

Generally, we get frowned upon for handing in anything that's not Times New Roman. A few of the profs might let an Ariel or two slip by, but they tend to be the zanier ones, teaching Twentieth Century Dramatic Lesbianism or what not.

The bane of my academic life is footnoting. Or, to be more accurate, formatting footnotes correctly. I once neglected to put an author's first name in a footnote. Ruh-roh.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 22, 22:32:56
I have a wacky colleague who insists on courier. And a paperclip. Why? I have no idea.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 22, 22:34:06
Once when I was 12, I turned in an essay written in Comic Sans just to see what would happen.  Unfortunately (or, perhaps, fortunately for my grade) nothing did.  My high school teachers had no backbone.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: witch on 2009 July 23, 07:15:45
My workplace is so sick of tutors using stupid fonts, spacing, headings and layout I have been asked to make templates for everything from PowerPoint slides to reports, faxes and memos.

So tomorrow morning I will be locking down dox.  ;D

The committee - argh - has decided on Calibri size 11, which could have been worse, at least they didn't choose Times new Roman.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: PirateFaafy on 2009 July 23, 18:40:39
Twentieth Century Dramatic Lesbianism
For a second I thought this was a font that you were referring to.

* Faafy goes off to look for this font

Once when I was 12, I turned in an essay written in Comic Sans just to see what would happen.  Unfortunately (or, perhaps, fortunately for my grade) nothing did.  My high school teachers had no backbone.

Oh god, Comic Sans. I was asked to revise an essay once that was written entirely in Comic Sans. I put a big red pen line through the cover page and upon it wrote "DIFFERENT FONT". I got out of it by saying that their teacher wouldn't accept the paper. But in reality, they probably would have. I just want to see that font dead.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Georgette on 2009 July 23, 18:47:57
Could be worse. I remember in year 8 when all the girls in my class would do their homework/projects in Curlz MT. I, ever the non-conformist chose to avoid this annoying trend. Coursework at my school gets rejected now if it's not in size 12 Times New Roman, which I personally dislike but it's an improvement on Impact, for sure.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Stitches on 2009 July 23, 18:56:25
Generally, we get frowned upon for handing in anything that's not Times New Roman. A few of the profs might let an Ariel or two slip by, but they tend to be the zanier ones, teaching Twentieth Century Dramatic Lesbianism or what not.

My college's literature department is officially pro-Ariel. All coursework must be done in Ariel. However, the history department has a serif fetish. Most of the professors require Times New Roman. A few of them require Courier. Apparently, it's tradition.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 July 23, 19:07:07
Generally, we get frowned upon for handing in anything that's not Times New Roman. A few of the profs might let an Ariel or two slip by, but they tend to be the zanier ones, teaching Twentieth Century Dramatic Lesbianism or what not.

My college's literature department is officially pro-Ariel. All coursework must be done in Ariel. However, the history department has a serif fetish. Most of the professors require Times New Roman. A few of them require Courier. Apparently, it's tradition.

In that case, for the sake of tradition, they should insist on a real typewriter font, non-proportional, that emulates the fuzzy edges of letters you'd get from worn hammers and old ribbon.  That's tradition.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 23, 21:25:39
Being as I know I can rely on the highly-refined grammar knowledge presented in this here forum, I was hoping that somebody may be able to shed some light on correct apostrophe use before I slip up and make a royal tit of myself.  (Granted, it's possible that I have done so already unbeknownst to me.  I do try, but I'm equally as eager to learn.)

I was taught consistently throughout high school that "it's" is apostrophised only when used as a conjunction of the phrase "it is".  Similarly I was taught that possession is indicated by use of an apostrophe: the man's telephone, the animal's cage.  When "it" is used as a personal pronoun - "the dog and its bone" - I am completely lost.  It seems the ranks are divided completely evenly and only one can be correct.  Does its always take an apostrophe afterwards?  Its'?  I've not seen that before.  I was told that apostrophe use is determined by whether the subject is referred to in the sentence already but I'm no linguistic expert. 

Having seen people correct its as its' within the forum when various other websites contradict this usage, I'm now even more confused than I was previously.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Georgette on 2009 July 23, 21:28:06
As far as I'm aware, the apostrophe is only necessary when it's a contraction of it is, and using it in any other context is wrong. The grammar police will obviously know for sure though.

Edit: corrected typo


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 23, 21:28:40
Ranks are not divided - there is only one correct answer.  Possessive form of it = its.  Nothing else.  

ETA: "It's" is a contraction, not a conjunction.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jack Rudd on 2009 July 23, 21:35:46
Grammar Cat is ready to answer your questions:

(http://wikka.moreawesomethanyou.com/images/0/08/It%27s_cat.png)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 23, 22:38:55
Bugger, contraction, yes.  At least a conjunction is a grammatical element, to lessen the pwn of my epic fail.  Noted.

Indeed Roflganger, I knew only one answer could be the correct answer; it was knowing who to trust between an English teacher and a grammar Nazi that I was unsure of.  In this case, both parties were wrong since "the dog and it's bone" and "the dog and its' bone" are both incorrect.  I knew you would not fail me, MATY.  You did not disappoint.

However, it was this post of yours (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php/topic,15068.msg434225.html#msg434225) which stumped me.  Perhaps I misunderstood your intention - my brain has a habit of malfunctioning on me at times, resulting in mindfuck.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 23, 22:49:22
Indeed Roflganger, I knew only one answer could be the correct answer; it was knowing who to trust between an English teacher and a grammar Nazi that I was unsure of.  In this case, both parties were wrong since "the dog and it's bone" and "the dog and its' bone" are both incorrect.

I know I shouldn't be so surprised that an "English teacher" (quotes intentional) would promote either one of these idiocies, but alas. Are there any higher-ups to whom you might recommend some corrective action to keep this so-called teacher from infecting others with his/her stupidity?

Quote
However, it was this post of yours (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com/smf/index.php/topic,15068.msg434225.html#msg434225) which stumped me.

Look more closely. Roflganger was striking through an extraneous apostrophe. See that little line underneath the apostrophe in red? That's because strikethrough style doesn't know to hop up to where the apostrophe normally lives. It just puts its line somewhere in the middle of where lowercase glyphs are aligned.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 23, 23:13:59
Better to have questioned my own understanding of grammar before I questioned somebody else's.

I am sure it would be within my power to forward such matters to a person of higher authority but being as quality of education has never been a primary concern for that particular school, I doubt it would be well received.  There was more than one occasion where students had to correct teachers, not to mention that I'm hardly a favourite of the current headteacher.  (Apparently I am not within my rights to object to being placed in a GCSE English Language class barely weeks away from the exam to be taught how to use a full stop correctly in a sentence alongside lesser beings who needed this instruction.)

Also, I appreciate your clarification.  I'd mistaken the strikethrough for an exclamation mark and naïvely assumed that the apostrophe had been added.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 23, 23:22:52
The rule you want to think about here is the rule that says possessive pronouns don't take apostrophes while possessive nouns do.

"The boy's dog becomes "his dog", and not "hi's dog".
"The book is the girl's" becomes "the book is hers" not "the book is her's".
"That plate belongs to me and the other one belongs to you" becomes "This is mine; that is yours" not "This is mine; that is your's".

Thus, possessive pronouns are as follows:

mine
yours
his, hers, its
ours
yours (again, for the plural)
theirs

None of them take an apostrophe.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 23, 23:38:28
Indeed.  Funny you may think it but we were never taught any kind of grammatical terminology beyond what nouns, verbs and adjectives are.  We got a brief intro on adverbs and most everything else consisted of learning the difference between a metaphor and a simile, learning how to write short stories, persuasive texts or newspaper articles and snazzy but generally useless things such as alliteration and mnemonics.  Never mind sentence structure, tenses or even something as basic as being taught how to speak and write our country's predominant language.  No word of a lie, I still see people spell babies as baby's or more annoyingly, would have as would of.

I remember my A-level French class consisting of ream after ream of conjugated verbs, not only having to memorise them but having to know how to conjugate any verb we wanted.  Although I adore the English language, at times it can be a shame that it is not bound by so many rules and restrictions such as gender agreement.  Maybe if communication depended on it, more people would be encouraged to at least make the effort to learn it. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 23, 23:51:49
So you are saying because you didn't know the terminology, what I said is not a rule?

Oh, and I can easily believe you weren't taught how to write effectively.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 00:18:16
So you are saying because you didn't know the terminology, what I said is not a rule?
Au contraire.  What I am saying is, for somebody who obviously has a firm grasp on the technicalities of the English language and especially with regard to grammar, you would probably find it shocking that it's something we weren't even taught.  Pointing out, in rather a poor manner it seems, that less attention was paid to actually learning how to read and write English at my school than at yours.  It was barely even seen as important.

Oh, and I can easily believe you weren't taught how to write effectively.
This being the reason for asking in the first place.  It's never too late to learn.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 24, 00:26:08
If I were shocked every time some retard said it didn't learn something in school, my job would have killed me by now. Did you have an actual point, here?

What is it with you people who ask grammar questions and then ignore the perfectly sensible answers you are given? What are you, gerbils?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: DrNerd on 2009 July 24, 00:27:29
How do schools not teach tense and subject/verb agreement anymore?  Is this like the "New Math" where kids don't learn times tables or fractions that aren't 1/2, 1/4, 3/4, 1/3, or 2/3?  That's like trying to build a functional house out of pretzel sticks and spit.

I am all for Child Left Behind.  If you're a dumbass, learn the basics.  If you're not a dumbass, learn stuff that actually challenges you.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 00:50:56
You weren't ignored - I acknowledged your response.  What further concession would you have liked?  I then simply corrected the misconception that I believed you to be incorrect in what you had said.  I agreed whole-heartedly.

As for why I was giving you my life story, no, there was no point to that.  I thought somebody in a parallel dimension cared.  I was talking at whoever would listen.

As for Math, DrNerd, don't even get me started.  We were left to teach ourselves the remaining two chapters of the book as we were seen as "capable".  The teacher focused her efforts on teaching algebra, simple x+y=z formulae, for the third or fourth time that year.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: witch on 2009 July 24, 06:43:25
It's because the morons are all breeding like rabbits.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 24, 07:20:29
Oh, and I can easily believe you weren't taught how to write effectively.

This being the reason for asking in the first place.  It's never too late to learn.


Indeed.  "Funny you may think it" parses to me as "Funny, you might think so but..." more than the apparently intended "You might think it's funny, but..."  I'm not saying that was the source of Rohina's confusion, but it certainly caused some for me.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 24, 07:41:20
People who start sentences with "This being" tend to be lost causes anyway, because even if you can teach them to express themselves grammatically, the whole "this being" construction tends to be a marker for "causality, it is not for me".


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 July 24, 13:25:52
People who start sentences with "This being" tend to be lost causes anyway...

HEY!  I do that sometimes.  This being the case, perhaps I should repent me of my wrongdoing, although I really think I use the construct correctly.  I am open to comments and criticism, of course.

As a lost cause, perhaps I should sing "Dixie" (or was that a Glorious Cause?).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 24, 14:59:23
Indeed.  "Funny you may think it" parses to me as "Funny, you might think so but..." more than the apparently intended "You might think it's funny, but..."  I'm not saying that was the source of Rohina's confusion, but it certainly caused some for me.

I actually interpreted it as "Funny as you may think it..." which makes perfect sense.

People who start sentences with "This being" tend to be lost causes anyway, because even if you can teach them to express themselves grammatically, the whole "this being" construction tends to be a marker for "causality, it is not for me".

If you are trying to argue that it's illogical to put the cause clause first, I feel obligated to point out that for some languages that is the preferred order.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 16:04:57
"Funny you may think it" parses to me as "Funny, you might think so but..." more than the apparently intended "You might think it's funny, but..."
I see how ambiguous that was now, I understand the confusion.  I will paraphrase more clearly.

If you are trying to argue that it's illogical to put the cause clause first, I feel obligated to point out that for some languages that is the preferred order.
Perhaps because it is a phrase I'm so used to hearing on a daily basis, I'm not entirely sure how it is wrong.  I'm sure it will be pointed out to be in meticulous detail, however.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 24, 16:09:09
If you are trying to argue that it's illogical to put the cause clause first, I feel obligated to point out that for some languages that is the preferred order.
Perhaps because it is a phrase I'm so used to hearing on a daily basis, I'm not entirely sure how it is wrong.  I'm sure it will be pointed out to be in meticulous detail, however.

It's simple:  It is not part of rohina's dialect, and is thus ABOMINATION.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: CheritaChen on 2009 July 24, 16:19:15
If you are trying to argue that it's illogical to put the cause clause first, I feel obligated to point out that for some languages that is the preferred order.

Now I feel obligated to point out that we are not communicating in some languages on this forum. We all, including Midwing, are using English.

Besides that, my objection to such a construction would not be so much in the order as the clunky tense of the sentence. There is a distinction between

This being the case, perhaps I should repent me of my wrongdoing, although I really think I use the construct correctly.

and

This being the reason for asking in the first place.  It's never too late to learn.

jolrei used a separate clause that, while not a great sentence unto itself, did not obfuscate any of the requisite elements of subject (I), verb (should repent) and object (wrongdoing) which were all clearly rendered by the sentence. Midwing used a construction that unnecessarily garbled the flow of information and made something passive (either this or reason, it's not easy to distinguish) which shouldn't have been (being vs. is).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 16:36:44
So, "That was my reason for asking" instead?  "This is why I asked"?  "It is because of this I asked"?  "I asked because of this?"

Am I any closer?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 24, 16:50:46
If you are trying to argue that it's illogical to put the cause clause first, I feel obligated to point out that for some languages that is the preferred order.

Now I feel obligated to point out that we are not communicating in some languages on this forum. We all, including Midwing, are using English.

Yes, which is why I started the sentence with "If you are trying to argue that it's illogical to..."  Logic is not language-specific; just because the fact-reason order sounds better in your dialect of English does not mean that it is necessarily more logical than the cause-result order, which sounds better in other dialects (and in other languages).


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 24, 16:52:27
If you are trying to argue that it's illogical to put the cause clause first, I feel obligated to point out that for some languages that is the preferred order.

No, I was arguing that people who use "this being" or even better "this being that" think that "this being" is a phrase which explains something, as opposed to being completely useless, devoid of meaning, and often used purely to turn what follows it into a gobbledegook fragment.

Midwing's example is exactly why I have a problem: "This being the reason for asking in the first place" is a fragment. The verb is incorrect and it makes Midwing sound like a pretentious nard who wants to sound fancy but has no idea how to form a sentence.

I was also talking about English, which I know is a topic you can't stand. Because any comment anyone makes about any language must apply to all languages. Except French, apparently. rufio doesn't care about French.

But, do go on with your interminable argument about how everything I say is wrong.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 24, 17:08:47
Since you were raging against people beginning sentences with "this being", I thought you were including sentences beginning with "this being the case,..." as well, but clearly you weren't.  This is kind of like how people insist that starting a sentence with "Because" is wrong, despite the fact that there are plenty of prescriptively correct sentence structures that can begin with "because".

However, I wonder if you would still take issue with Midwing's sentence if it began with "hence" instead of "This being":

(quote)
"Hence my asking in the first place."

vs.

(quote)
"This being the reason for asking in the first place."

vs. the technically correct

(quote)
"is why I asked in the first place."

What say you?  Is it only OK to use fragments for effect if you use ancient vocabulary?  At what point does a fragment used for effect become "gobbledygook"?  Would you say that "this being" is more pretentious than "hence"?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 17:18:51
This needn't degenerate into a torrent of insults and personal arguments.  I really couldn't care less about the execution of correction but this is becoming more about who is right and their authority in correcting me, even their motives behind correcting me, rather than just getting on with it.  This was never a personal issue between rohina and me.  My sentence was incorrect.  Simple as.

This is wrong.  This is why.  This is correct.  It's a simple protocol to follow.  ::)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 24, 17:22:22
"That was my reason for asking" instead? 

Am I any closer?

This one gets my vote.  It's clear, concise and to the point. 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 July 24, 17:36:46
This needn't degenerate into a torrent of insults and personal arguments.  I really couldn't care less about the execution of correction but this is becoming more about who is right and their authority in correcting me, even their motives behind correcting me, rather than just getting on with it.  This was never a personal issue between rohina and me.  My sentence was incorrect.  Simple as.

Oh don't worry about that.  They enjoy it.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 24, 18:19:26
However, I wonder if you would still take issue with Midwing's sentence if it began with "hence" instead of "The being":

(quote)
"Hence my asking in the first place."

vs.

(quote)
"This being the reason for asking in the first place."

vs. the technically correct

(quote)
"is why I asked in the first place."

What say you?  Is it only OK to use fragments for effect if you use ancient vocabulary?  At what point does a fragment used for effect become "gobbledygook"?  Would you say that "this being" is more pretentious than "hence"?

The first one is still wrong. Hence is not the issue, it's the verb. My point was, though, that using "this being" is not only incorrect, it also is an indicator of a non-grammatical problem. This comes from my experience, so I know you won't count it.

I am not averse to fragments for stylistic effect, but I don think any of your examples count in this category.

This needn't degenerate into a torrent of insults and personal arguments.

HA HA HA HA HA HA HA.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 24, 18:37:39
The first one is still wrong. Hence is not the issue, it's the verb.

Which verb?  I thought you meant "being", since the only other verb in the sentence is "asking" which is part of a subordinate clause anyway, and correct as far as I can tell.  Unless by "verb" you mean "absence of main finite verb".  In any case, you have stated in the past that it is OK to use sentence fragments for effect, and since you are (so you say) an expert on stylistics, I was wondering if you'd be willing to share your qualifications for precisely when it is OK to use sentence fragments with the plebes.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: littleblackdog on 2009 July 24, 20:13:59
This being the reason for asking in the first place.  It's never too late to learn.
[/quote]

isn't this a mispaced modifier?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 24, 20:29:19
This being the reason for asking in the first place.  It's never too late to learn.

isn't this a mispaced modifier? [/quote]

What modifier do you think is "mispaced", exactly?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: littleblackdog on 2009 July 24, 20:32:14
" This being the reason for asking in the first place"


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 20:36:18
The whole sentence can't be a misplaced modifier, surely?  The only thing in that sentence which I would have thought could be a misplaced modifier would be "in the first place" but as has been discussed ad infinitum, I'm no grammatical expert.  It strikes me that unless you know your stuff, you'd best leave this kind of thing to those who do.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: littleblackdog on 2009 July 24, 20:42:26
The whole sentence can't be a misplaced modifier, surely?  The only thing in that sentence which I would have thought could be a misplaced modifier would be "in the first place" but as has been discussed ad infinitum, I'm no grammatical expert.  It strikes me that unless you know your stuff, you'd best leave this kind of thing to those who do.
I do not know my stuff,  that is why I was asking.  I will go and see if I can find the answer on the internet.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 24, 20:43:40
littleblackdog, it is not good enough to just memorize catch phrases - you actually have to learn what they mean, too.

A misplaced modifier is a verbal adjective which is itself the head of a clause, which also modifies a noun in a higher clause; however, the clause it heads is placed in such a way that it is not clear which noun it modifies, causing (often hilarious) syntactic ambiguity.  Is what Midwing said ambiguous?  No.  This is a hint.  I suppose you could count "being" as a verbal adjective, but it's obvious that it's modifying "this".  If you want to say that it's not clear what "this" refers to (which is not the case) that would be an ambiguous anaphor.  "Asking" is a gerund and not a verbal adjective at all.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 20:48:11
I find that this website (http://aliscot.com/bigdog/dmmm_exercise.htm) is a useful exercise that may help.  I just scanned through it.

Asking a question, no matter how much initiative you are attempting to show at improving the level of your grammar, apparently doesn't protect you from the wrath of those who know better than you do.  Bear that in mind.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 24, 21:13:06
Asking a question, no matter how much initiative you are attempting to show at improving the level of your grammar, apparently doesn't protect you from the wrath of those who know better than you do.

"Is that a misplaced modifier?" suggests littleblackdog doesn't know the answer and wants to learn.  "Isn't that a misplaced modifier?" suggests littleblackdog believes he knows the answer and is looking for affirmation.  The first type of question seems generally well-received in these parts.  The second type may result in wrath and ridicule if the asker is not correct after all.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 21:24:02
Was her question not, word-for-word, a perfect example of the second type of question you just mentioned?

Or were you saying that being ridiculed is less to do with asking a question than the manner in which you ask it?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Roflganger on 2009 July 24, 21:30:28
Was her question not, word-for-word, a perfect example of the second type of question you just mentioned?

Or were you saying that being ridiculed is less to do with asking a question than the manner in which you ask it?

You said that asking a question invites wrath.  I said that asking a question with the intention of learning (rather than trying to prove that you know something) does NOT invite wrath. 



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Midwing on 2009 July 24, 21:35:22
I asked a question with the intention of learning.  I could do no right in some eyes!  Miscommunication is a bugger.  :P


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 25, 06:00:51
The first one is still wrong. Hence is not the issue, it's the verb.

Which verb?  I thought you meant "being", since the only other verb in the sentence is "asking" which is part of a subordinate clause anyway, and correct as far as I can tell.  Unless by "verb" you mean "absence of main finite verb".  In any case, you have stated in the past that it is OK to use sentence fragments for effect, and since you are (so you say) an expert on stylistics, I was wondering if you'd be willing to share your qualifications for precisely when it is OK to use sentence fragments with the plebes.

It can't be a subordinate clause if it is the ONLY clause.

When exactly? Oh, say when you don't confuse nouns with their homonyms?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: stephyd on 2009 July 25, 12:29:02
This thread is nothing but an exhibition of  verbiose pomposity . I think, in all my life, I have never read such an outpouring of needless animosity to other people, regarding almost irrelevant triviality. As an Englishwoman, I can assure you that English is a language constantly changing in form, structure and content. So much so that our dictionaries and grammar books are updated regularly. In other words, we don't actually give a damn how you write something, as long as it is clearly understandable.  We even have a Society for Plain English (who would consider this thread as an offence to the English language) who are held with great regard. We do have basic rules of grammar, but beyond that, it is our greatest joy to toy and play with our language and  find new ways of expressing ourselves. In other words, UK English is constantly growing, and long may it continue to do so. Britannia rules, OK!
Your inane chitchat regarding the minutiae of  our wonderful and adaptable English language is no more than v.d. pontificated by anal retentives, pompous self-deluded asses with nothing better to do with their time
In plain English - what a load of tripe!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: ZeKat on 2009 July 25, 13:18:03
This thread is nothing but an exhibition of  verbiose pomposity . I think, in all my life, I have never read such an outpouring of needless animosity to other people, regarding almost irrelevant triviality. As an Englishwoman, I can assure you that English is a language constantly changing in form, structure and content. So much so that our dictionaries and grammar books are updated regularly. In other words, we don't actually give a damn how you write something, as long as it is clearly understandable.  We even have a Society for Plain English (who would consider this thread as an offence to the English language) who are held with great regard. We do have basic rules of grammar, but beyond that, it is our greatest joy to toy and play with our language and  find new ways of expressing ourselves. In other words, UK English is constantly growing, and long may it continue to do so. Britannia rules, OK!
Your inane chitchat regarding the minutiae of  our wonderful and adaptable English language is no more than v.d. pontificated by anal retentives, pompous self-deluded asses with nothing better to do with their time
In plain English - what a load of tripe!

Still, you need to stop using double spaces, and especially spaces before a full stop, no matter how you decide to spell. Also, it's spelled "verbose". I think you should stick to plain English, really.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Kyna on 2009 July 25, 13:43:47
as long as it is clearly understandable.

That's the critical part of your post.  Personally, I find posts where people have taken the trouble to use appropriate punctuation and correct spelling to be much clearer and much more understandable than posts that lack those attributes.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: snabul on 2009 July 25, 14:25:51
For me, english is a foreign language. I learn english inter alia by reading your postings.

Most of the time it is very hard to translate the gobbledygook (?) that befalls me at other sites.

So, for me it is very comfortable to have the GRAMMAR POLICE around, here.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 25, 14:59:50
It can't be a subordinate clause if it is the ONLY clause.

Since it was the object of a preposition, it's hard to see how it could be anything else.

Quote
When exactly? Oh, say when you don't confuse nouns with their homonyms?

Confusing homophones is a lexical issue, though, not a syntactical one.  In any case, there were no confused homophones in that fragment.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 25, 15:54:39
This thread is nothing but an exhibition of  verbiose pomposity... As an Englishwoman, I can assure you that English is a language constantly changing... Your inane chitchat regarding the minutiae of  our wonderful and adaptable English language...

For those wishing to skip the diatribe, allow me to summarise: I ARE ENGLISH! RESPEKT MAH AUTHORITAH!
Honestly, stephyd, the idea that being "an Englishwoman" makes you some sort of linguistic authority is pomposity on a level the rest of this thread couldn't dream of achieving.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 July 25, 15:58:11
Oi - another one.  Where do they come from?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Kyna on 2009 July 25, 16:04:35
Oi - another one.  Where do they come from?

/me misses the days when the only link to MATY that was given out led to the front page (http://www.moreawesomethanyou.com) of the site.  None of this direct linking to the forums business.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 25, 16:33:50
It can't be a subordinate clause if it is the ONLY clause.

Since it was the object of a preposition, it's hard to see how it could be anything else.

So, you agree, it was a fragment.

Quote from: rohina link=topic=15068.msg463137#msg463137 date=1248501651
[quote
When exactly? Oh, say when you don't confuse nouns with their homonyms?

Confusing homophones is a lexical issue, though, not a syntactical one.  In any case, there were no confused homophones in that fragment.

My point, which is sailing merrily over your headpeen, is that wanking on about style ought to be an activity reserved for people who can express themselves correctly on a regular basis.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 25, 17:29:07
So, you agree, it was a fragment.

The issue is not whether or not it was a fragment, but when it is ok to use fragments for effect.  Why do I feel like I'm repeating myself?  Oh, right...

Quote
My point, which is sailing merrily over your headpeen, is that wanking on about style ought to be an activity reserved for people who can express themselves correctly on a regular basis.

And my point is that spelling is not related to syntax or the style of sentence structure.  It seems my first intuition was right, and that the only people who are allowed to make stylistic choices about their language are the people who make certain sanctioned vocabulary choices as well.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 25, 19:14:57
The issue is not whether or not it was a fragment, but when it is ok to use fragments for effect.
Quote
My point, which is sailing merrily over your headpeen, is that wanking on about style ought to be an activity reserved for people who can express themselves correctly on a regular basis.
It seems my first intuition was right, and that the only people who are allowed to make stylistic choices about their language are the people who make certain sanctioned vocabulary choices as well.

rufio, the point you fail repeatedly to grasp is that someone's stylistic choices will only gain legitimacy if she can otherwise display a competent command of basic grammar skills, skills which apparently still elude you, given the total mess you continue to make of sentences like the two I've quoted.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 25, 20:05:29
If there is something wrong with my grammar, please don't hesitate to tell me what it is.  Also, technically speaking, spelling is not the same thing as grammar, and I don't see what it has to do with stylistic choices about syntax.  I could understand it if it was a rule that was purely governed by popular perception, but rohina, by asserting that her personal expertise on the subject outranks everyone else's, seems to be indicating that stylistics is actually a kind of objectively quantifiable science.  All I am asking for is the objectively quantifiable rules of said science.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 26, 01:48:16
Oh, for fuck's sake. If you would stop for 2 seconds trying to make me into the villain, you would see that my argument isn't some kind of crazed "only what I say goes" nonsense. Essentially, my position is that spelling, punctuation and grammar are craft; stylistics is art. Compare it to painting: any hamtard can throw paint at a canvas, and maybe sometimes even get an aesthetically pleasing result, but a real artist has command of technique and craft, and knows WHY he/she achieved an aesthetically pleasing result.

Now, the reason I am not going to discuss stylistics with you rufio, is that you want some kind of formula, but the only way I have to explain stylistics is through literary theory, which, as you have said several times, is beyond your understanding.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 26, 03:50:15
Oh, for fuck's sake. If you would stop for 2 seconds trying to make me into the villain, you would see that my argument isn't some kind of crazed "only what I say goes" nonsense.

That is not what I'm trying to say.  Obviously, you are going to do what you want to do, and criticize people's grammar as you see fit; I'm just trying to find out if there is a method to the madness.

Quote
Essentially, my position is that spelling, punctuation and grammar are craft; stylistics is art. Compare it to painting: any hamtard can throw paint at a canvas, and maybe sometimes even get an aesthetically pleasing result, but a real artist has command of technique and craft, and knows WHY he/she achieved an aesthetically pleasing result.

Thank you for the explanation (unless you are still offended by that sort of thing, in which case, feel free to ignore it).  Now, I'm not an artist, but I imagine that a real artist does not need to be perfect at every single technique they know in order to produce art.  They might well produce a few shoddy pieces of art, but that shouldn't affect the perceived quality of their better ones.  Similarly, I don't understand how a person whose ability to spell might be somewhat compromised, or who doesn't have a huge vocabulary, would not be able to use their skills with syntax to use style to convey additional meaning or tone.  Obviously, if they use words they cannot spell/do not know the meaning of it doesn't work, but if their deficiencies do not actually adversely affect what they are writing at a given time, I see no reason why it can't be judged stylistically on its own merits.

Quote
Now, the reason I am not going to discuss stylistics with you rufio, is that you want some kind of formula, but the only way I have to explain stylistics is through literary theory, which, as you have said several times, is beyond your understanding.

I don't think I did; I may have said that I didn't know any literary theory, or that I was not interested in devoting large amounts of my time to studying it, but that's different from saying that I cannot learn it.  I am actually interested in the specifics of when you think it is ok to use sentence fragments for effect.  I don't want a formula, but I would appreciate some rules at least.  As you said, an artist will know why their art is aesthetically pleasing, and will probably have an internal set of rules for what times are best to apply certain techniques rather than others.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 26, 04:58:24
Yes, an artist will know, because there are theories of aesthetics. Similarly, it is possible to analyse the style of a piece of writing. In my business, we call this rhetorical analysis, and there are lots of different ways to do it. From previous conversations with you, I really don't think it is a skill you are going to be able to acquire; not because you are a moron, but rather because you tend to get really hung up on specific grammatical rules, and then you can't see the forest for the trees.

Here's a beginners' challenge for you. Go read Donne's "For Whom the Bell Tolls" meditation (http://www.luminarium.org/sevenlit/donne/meditation17.php), and come back when you can tell me what the stylistic significance of the semicolon is in that piece.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 26, 06:06:43
You know, I think I read that in an English class once, though the only concrete thing that actually stayed with me was a discussion of the etymology of catholic and why he used it as a synonym for universal.  Figures.

Reading over it, it seems like he is using semicolons to draw out and further develop the same idea in greater complexity for a half a paragraph without having to start a new sentence (and thus an entirely new tone contour).  To my inner voice, it makes those sentences sound like a prayer.  Doubtless you see it differently, as you claim not to have an inner voice, and therefore the phonic qualities of written English have no relevance whatsoever.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 26, 06:49:37
Fail. This is not about me, or your inner voice. It was a simple instruction. Go and read it and tell me what the semicolons are doing, stylistically. Don't wank about it in a hopeful way because you have no clue.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 26, 07:12:41
Well, I gave my interpretation; the semicolons have the effect of changing the tone/pitch of the section into something more lyrical and devout, and thus more appropriate to his subject matter.  What was the correct answer?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 26, 16:52:37
This was not about your interpretation. You wanted to know what the "rules" were. I said you aren't intellectually capable, and gave you a test. You failed. Wanking on about music is not any better than your first stab at it.

Here's an easier one. Same piece. Identify 3 types of repetition Donne uses, and explain the rhetorical effect of each.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 26, 17:49:43
I'm sure whatever I say is just going to be rejected because I don't know the correct terms, but...

Quote
When she baptizes a child, [...]And when she buries a man[...]

A repetition of the sentence structure to emphasize the point, and probably to imply that the life between the birth and the death is similarly interlinked.  I assume this is the same sort of thing that's happening with the "But who....(But) who...But who...?" questions as well, unless, of course, it isn't.   ::)

Quote
for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee
Quote
The bell doth toll for him, that thinks it doth

There is an attractive syntactic reversal here, though at least in the one case it's really just a side effect of the way relative clauses work; however it looks like a repetition to me.  It's possible that I'm simply being distracted by the oddness of "for whom."

Quote
when one man dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book,

"one...one" to equate the man and the chapter.

There, that's three.  I'm not going to go trawling through this trying to figure out what it is that you want me to say anymore.
------

This was not about your interpretation.

And yet you claimed this was an art, and not a science.  Make up your mind already.

Quote
You wanted to know what the "rules" were. I said you aren't intellectually capable, and gave you a test. You failed.

Intellectually capable of what?  Understanding something when it is taught to me?  Or magically figuring out everything there is to know about your field from first principles?  I imagine that, as with every field, you have to learn to look at things in a slightly different way in order to really get it.  Randomly asking questions and expecting me to automatically come up with answers you'd expect from English majors is not the way to teach that.  Yes, I am criticizing your teaching, if that is what you are trying to do here.

Quote
Wanking on about music is not any better than your first stab at it.

The first stab was the same as the second stab, you were just too busy feeling put upon to notice.  Also, "lyrical" does not necessarily have anything to do with music, but you'd know that, since you're a Lit professor, right?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 26, 21:01:00
You, sir, are a moron. I said stylistics was more art than craft, and that the way I would talk about it was by using literary theory. You were  all "I want the rules" and then you give your crap interpretations of stuff. I don't want YOUR crap interpretations. This was a test to see if you were worthy of having further dialogue. You failed. Twice.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TheQuietOne on 2009 July 26, 21:12:06
I'm sure whatever I say is just going to be rejected because I don't know the correct terms, but...

Cough(AnaphoraEpistropheEpanalepsisAnadiplosisMesodiplosisDiaphoraDiacopeConduplicatioEpizeuxis)cough.

Google is your friend.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 26, 21:42:30
Hur. rufio is pwnt by some 10 poast lurker.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 08:29:17
Hur. rufio is pwnt by some 10 poast lurker.

Yes, because the number of posts you have on MATY is such a good indication of how many stylistics classes you have taken.

This is a fascinating argument technique, though.  The next time I'm losing an argument, I'll just challenge my opponent to list the distinctive features of /ð/, or explain the purpose of a syntactic expletive, and refuse to talk to them if they answer incorrectly.

I asked you a very simple, specific question, and you simply refused to answer.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 27, 08:37:31
No. She said that the mechanics and rules are different from style. She even used a decent analogy.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 08:46:06
That is not an answer to "When is it OK to use a sentence fragment for effect?"


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 27, 10:02:19
"When is it OK to use a sentence fragment for effect?"

The simplest answer? If you don't know whether it's okay to use a fragment for effect, it's not okay. If you know it's okay, it's okay. That sounds like total smartassery, but it isn't meant to be. Much.

If one is proficient at mechanics and rules, she can effectively proceed to experiment with form. Against a solid, grammatical foundation, embellishments and deviations contrast properly as the stylistic flourishes they are meant to be. But if one fails to lay that foundation, any choices she might wish to explain as stylistic fail to achieve merit, lost as they are among the comma splices, sentence fragments, and other linguistic rubble.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 10:11:27
The simplest answer? If you don't know whether it's okay to use a fragment for effect, it's not okay. If you know it's okay, it's okay.

Well I do know - or, I thought I did, and I wanted to know what the rules are according to rohina, who apparently thinks they are different.

Quote
If one is proficient at mechanics and rules, she can effectively proceed to experiment with form. Against a solid, grammatical foundation, embellishments and deviations contrast properly as the stylistic flourishes they are meant to be. But if one fails to lay that foundation, any choices she might wish to explain as stylistic fail to achieve merit, lost as they are among the comma splices, sentence fragments, and other linguistic rubble.

Well, the criticism leveled at the person using a sentence fragment for effect was that they were using a sentence fragment.  So, we are back to the same question - at what point does using a sentence fragment for effect not count as an error which precludes one from using sentence fragments for effect?  Or is it possible that there are actual rules about when sentence fragments are erroneous or not?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 27, 10:51:12
That is not an answer to "When is it OK to use a sentence fragment for effect?"

When it is clear from your output that you have mastered the basic rules and guidelines, you can occasionally deviate for stylistic effect.

A single instance that underscores failure to grasp the basic rules, however, means that your "stylistic" choice to use a fragment (or whatever non-standard deviations you indulge in) will be seen as ignorance of the rules, and not a stylistic flourish.

Example: Grammar Police occasionally insert Catois or Internet memes into posts on MATY. Grammar Police have demonstrated a grasp of the rules and guidelines of grammar. Only the most dense observer assumes that the Grammar Police could not, if they so chose, rephrase the concepts and communication demonstrated by their post contents into sentences appropriate for the most eggheady applications.

Also, the art analogy again holds true: once you know the basic rules and how to properly use the materials traditionally associated with the genre of art you wish to master, you can experiment with both the basic building block rules and substitute different materials or use materials in a new way. You have to learn your basic colour wheel before you start discussing colour theory and the traditionally accepted symbolism associated with certain colour choices and combinations before announcing that your personally-developed non-standard symbolism is completely different but just as easy to "read".

To dumb it down even more, since this seems to be hard to grasp: you must learn to WALK before you RUN.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 11:08:19
A single instance that underscores failure to grasp the basic rules, however, means that your "stylistic" choice to use a fragment (or whatever non-standard deviations you indulge in) will be seen as ignorance of the rules, and not a stylistic flourish.

So I take it that rohina and all of the Grammar Police have never once, in their entire lives, made a mistake in spelling or typing, or uttered a speech error.

Just to be clear, here.   ::)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 27, 13:00:32
A single instance that underscores failure to grasp the basic rules, however, means that your "stylistic" choice to use a fragment (or whatever non-standard deviations you indulge in) will be seen as ignorance of the rules, and not a stylistic flourish.

So I take it that rohina and all of the Grammar Police have never once, in their entire lives, made a mistake in spelling or typing, or uttered a speech error.

Just to be clear, here.   ::)

Again, since you are being thick, there is a difference between an error made due to ignorance, and an error made due to a typographical error, slip of the tongue, or botched edit. It is usually evident which type of error it is. If you find that you're unsure, the next few posts from the same writer generally serve to clarify whether it is stupidity or an atypical blunder.

ETR: A very unkind comment that served no useful purpose and would serve to distract further.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 13:21:30
Again, since you are being thick, there is a difference between an error made due to ignorance, and an error made due to a typographical error, slip of the tongue, or botched edit. It is usually evident which type of error it is. If you find that you're unsure, the next few posts from the same writer generally serve to clarify whether it is stupidity or an atypical blunder.

So, going back to the topic at hand, what horrible blunders has Midwing made that her sentence-fragment-for-effect was interpreted as an error?  As far as I can tell (at least on this thread) her only crime was agreeing with rohina about the sad state of the education system.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 July 27, 13:39:01
You'll need to waggle your headpeen at the people who corrected Midwing, rufio. I haven't said anything about his / her / its posts.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 13:44:22
"The people who corrected Midwing" have decided that they are not going to talk to me because I am not up to date with standard stylistics terminology.  Maybe you could hazard a guess as to their motivations?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: stephyd on 2009 July 27, 14:30:35
whayay man/hinny, divn't get yer niccas in a twist!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 27, 14:41:28
My guess as to when sentence fragments are okay:

If the sentence being in a fragment adds something to the style or the voice of the writing. If it doesn't contribute anything, then it just makes you sound like a tard. In other words, if it doesn't benefit from being a sentence fragment, why do it?

Anyways, the only time you really see sentence fragments as acceptable forms of expression would be during first person narratives. They have no place in essays (except maybe one about personal opinions or a non-English class essay question).

Quotations would be another exception.

(((Of course, I am by no means an expert. No surprise there. Most of it just seems to be common sense.)))


In a forum, you can get away with more sentence fragments than you would in other forms of expression. Considering that you are "talking" on a forum. The only time you see people get jumped on for fragments on a forum is when you get a hamtard that communicates like this:

"lololol totaly broke my game. My sim was bed bath now hall chair lololol do u noe what happeneded?"

or

whayay man/hinny, divn't get yer niccas in a twist!

WTF was that? Seriously, WTF was that?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 16:04:49
If the sentence being in a fragment adds something to the style or the voice of the writing. If it doesn't contribute anything, then it just makes you sound like a tard. In other words, if it doesn't benefit from being a sentence fragment, why do it?

This is my intuition also, but apparently there is some kind of hierarchy of Who Is Allowed To Use Fragments and Who Is Not Allowed To Use Fragments here.

Quote
exceptable

You mean "acceptable".

Quote
In a forum, you can get away with more sentence fragments than you would in other forms of expression. Considering that you are "talking" on a forum. The only time you see people get jumped on for fragments on a forum is when you get a hamtard that communicates like this:

"lololol totaly broke my game. My sim was bed bath now hall chair lololol do u noe what happeneded?"

And that's why I was wondering why Midwing was getting jumped on.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 27, 16:12:24
If the sentence being in a fragment adds something to the style or the voice of the writing. If it doesn't contribute anything, then it just makes you sound like a tard. In other words, if it doesn't benefit from being a sentence fragment, why do it?

This is my intuition also, but apparently there is some kind of hierarchy of Who Is Allowed To Use Fragments and Who Is Not Allowed To Use Fragments here.

I think there this an unspoken rule about n00bs blasting out grammar fragments like a grenade went off in their first few posts. It seems to be the difference between standing respectably while the teacher introduces you to a new classroom and jumping up on a school desk and doing the Bartman dance.

Quote
exceptable

Quote
You mean "acceptable".
Yes, I did. Sorry.  :P Three edits, and I missed that each time.

Quote
In a forum, you can get away with more sentence fragments than you would in other forms of expression. Considering that you are "talking" on a forum. The only time you see people get jumped on for fragments on a forum is when you get a hamtard that communicates like this:

"lololol totaly broke my game. My sim was bed bath now hall chair lololol do u noe what happeneded?"
Quote
And that's why I was wondering why Midwing was getting jumped on.

I can't answer that one, I skimmed over Midwing's intro to the thread.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 July 27, 16:14:35
I think that after 34 pages of this totally interesting go-nowhere argument between rufio and pretty much everyone else (special recognition to rohina for persistence), it behooves us to revisit the original purpose of this thread, just for nostalgia's sake.

Since the tidal wave of sheep shows no sign of letting up, and the most important task is sorting the occasional nugget of wheat from the chaff, Pescado has strongly suggested that grammatical errors and other behaviour demanding the sharp spork be handled by a barrage of PMs, rather than excessive poking in the thread. You may also like to take your guffaws to any relevant thread in RL, such as Miss Sheeple 2009.

I will be taking notice of the naughty and the nice with regard to respecting this decree, for Grammar Day Awards purposes. If warranted, someone can make a thread in RL to post the butthurt responses to the PM barrage.

Thank you for co-operation.

OH, and if you are a SHEEP reading this, then FUCKING LEARN TO SPELL, ASSHOLE.

See?  It wasn't even remotely about rufio.  I find this refreshing and enlightening.

Also, the word "futility" springs to mind.  (Yes, I know one should not start a sentence with "also" - it's non-standard.)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 27, 16:17:21
rufio, I answered your question; Lorelei gave you a similar answer in a different way; hell, even Jelly gestured at an answer, although hers is very simplistic. What you want is a set of rules for when it is okay to use a fragment; but there aren't "rules" in the way you want them. The point I was making with the questions I gave you was that if you can explain the stylistic function of a fragment, then it may have "merit" or be arguably effective.

Since you aren't really capable of understanding rhetorical analysis - it isn't about "interpretation" the way you appear to think - it isn't possible to explain the mechanics of it to you in any sophisticated way. I would suggest you take Jelly's simplistic explanation and be satisfied.

Following the rule, then, of "you can use fragments for effect if you have demonstrated you know the difference between a complete sentence and an incomplete sentence," Midwing is fail because its previous attempts at sentences had included gibberish, and the fragment it wrote was dreadful both stylistically and from a "your sentence, do she make any sense" point of view.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 27, 16:18:50
(Yes, I know one should not start a sentence with "also" - it's non-standard.)

You're not? Well, shit, no wonder I get a Grammar Boot every year.  :P What's the reasoning?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 July 27, 16:23:49
I don't really know specifically.  I learned my grammar a long time ago, and occasionally do an update, but the basic rules are now fully incorporated into the "it does/doesn't sound right" part of functional memory.  I think, a term like "additionally" would be more correct, whereas "also" is a more vernacular "common usage" type of thing, but technically incorrect.  It does appear to have a certain stylistic correctness on the internet, and is certainly used a lot as a sentence starter, so it has some level of common acceptance, depending on the context.  I wouldn't use it as a starter in formal text.

Then again, perhaps I'm just wrong.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 27, 16:28:10
I don't really know specifically.  I learned my grammar a long time ago, and occasionally do an update, but the basic rules are now fully incorporated into the "it does/doesn't sound right" part of functional memory.  I think, a term like "additionally" would be more correct, whereas "also" is a more vernacular "common usage" type of thing, but technically incorrect.  It does appear to have a certain stylistic correctness on the internet, and is certainly used a lot as a sentence starter, so it has some level of common acceptance, depending on the context.  I wouldn't use it as a starter in formal text.

Then again, perhaps I'm just wrong.

I want to say that I've used it in essays and never had an odd remark about it. I had some pretty old school Comp teachers too. They didn't believe in using sentence fragments for effect. =p I wouldn't think they would let "also sentences" slide. I could be wrong about that, though. Who knows about the thought processes of teachers I had ages ago might've been.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 16:45:44
I think that after 34 pages of this totally interesting go-nowhere argument between rufio and pretty much everyone else (special recognition to rohina for persistence), it behooves us to revisit the original purpose of this thread, just for nostalgia's sake.

Actually, I think you'll find that I did not even post in this thread until page 9, did not post in response to rohina until page 13, and did not post about grammar until page 21.  The issue on page 21 was an unrelated argument; the current one has only been going on for three pages.

Since you aren't really capable of understanding rhetorical analysis - it isn't about "interpretation" the way you appear to think - it isn't possible to explain the mechanics of it to you in any sophisticated way. I would suggest you take Jelly's simplistic explanation and be satisfied.

You are obviously looking for specific terms, and are going to reject any attempts to answer your questions that do not contain those terms.  I used the word "interpretation" only since I knew you were unlikely to accept any answer having to do with tone and pitch, as you claim to have no internal voice while reading.  Generally, when I think of "style" I think of the way something "sounds" while I'm reading it; you obviously mean a more concrete and universal set of literary devices, and since I no longer remember what they are, I will not be able to answer your question to your satisfaction.  It's not a matter of not understanding them, just of not having properly memorized a list.  I answered because I was under the impression that there would be some pearls of wisdom at the end of it, but I obviously forgot it was you I was talking to.

Quote
Midwing is fail because its previous attempts at sentences had included gibberish, and the fragment it wrote was dreadful both stylistically and from a "your sentence, do she make any sense" point of view.

Where did this gibberish take place?  Everything she posted in this thread is easy to read and more or less grammatically correct.  You just decided to throw a hissy fit because she used an unfamiliar turn of phrase.

ETA:  Proper quote tags.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 27, 17:19:10
Specific terms would have been nice, but that wasn't what I wanted, no.

The fragment made no sense. You are going to refuse to acknowledge that, no matter what I say, so I will not discuss it with you further.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 17:57:24
Specific terms would have been nice, but that wasn't what I wanted, no.

What did you want?  I'm curious.

(The fragment made sense to me, because as a fragment it implied a tone of voice to me that has a particular meaning when used IRL.  I can see why you didn't see that, though.)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 27, 18:06:11
Well, the implied "tone of voice" you identify isn't really a concept that other people might discern by reading.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 18:21:12
Actually, your lack of inner voice is fairly nonstandard.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 27, 18:28:13
Actually, your lack of inner voice is fairly nonstandard.

My point, you ridiculous tosspot, is that "this is how it sounds to MY inner voice" is a bullshit statement as far as meaning anything to anyone else is concerned. Because guess why? NO ONE CAN HEAR RUFIO'S INNER VOICE, EXCEPT RUFIO.

Also, "lack of inner voice" is complete misrepresentation. I said I didn't HAVE to hear stuff in my head. No that I couldn't.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 July 27, 18:34:00
The structure (and any number of semantic cues) imply the tone of voice, generally.

In any case, that part was in parentheses because it was not the main part of my post.  What did you want to hear from the little quiz you gave me?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 July 27, 20:42:22
The structure (and any number of semantic cues) imply the tone of voice, generally.

This at least is true.  I can easily discern rohina's growing ire and frustration from the structure and semantic/textual cues in her last post.  The inexplicable thing to me is why she even bothers to keep answering any of your posts, after most of the rest of us have given up due to sheer exhaustion (the "throwing up your hands" kind).  I can only imagine it's a slow day in Calgary.

I also imagine that if rohina was a ninja warrior, you would be a practice dummy.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 July 27, 22:14:51
Summer VACAY, jolrei. If this were term time, I would be more "HULK SMASH".


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 July 28, 00:38:12
I'm still amused by the idea that rufio's "inner voice" has ears. All sorts of body parts out of place on that non-standard head...


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Audrey on 2009 July 28, 10:22:25
Shame, poor Midwig. :(  Deja vu. You tried, Rufio, you really tried.  However, that little exchange between you and rohina did make for interesting and amusing reading. ;D


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: J. M. Pescado on 2009 July 28, 10:28:55
Because guess why? NO ONE CAN HEAR RUFIO'S INNER VOICE, EXCEPT RUFIO.
Actually, I've heard people's inner voices before. Remarkably, they all sound rather similar: Moist and squishy.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: jolrei on 2009 July 28, 13:45:38
Actually, I've heard people's inner voices before. Remarkably, they all sound rather similar: Moist and squishy.

Are you sure that's a voice?  I mean, once you get inside there, everything is moist and squishy.

On the other hand, if that is a voice, it seems possible that Joan of Arc's "voices" that compelled her to rampage through France and then jump into a BBQ were little more than gas and perhaps her tummy rumbling.  Joan was a hungry emo; thousands die.

[/historical reductionism]


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Jelenedra on 2009 July 28, 13:47:52
Actually, I've heard people's inner voices before. Remarkably, they all sound rather similar: Moist and squishy.

Are you sure that's a voice?  I mean, once you get inside there, everything is moist and squishy.

On the other hand, if that is a voice, it seems possible that Joan of Arc's "voices" that compelled her to rampage through France and then jump into a BBQ were little more than gas and perhaps her tummy rumbling.  Joan was a hungry emo; thousands die.

[/historical reductionism]

Now you're making me want to watch The Messenger. Just for the scene where the Dustin Hoffman voice starts giving her a bunch of random scenarios as to why there might've been a sword lying in the middle of a field.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: K_L_Carten on 2009 August 08, 09:17:19
I have been lurking here on and off for years, but I have been a little afraid about my grammar.  Just like many of others here, its been years since I have taken a English class and even had to write something that I was truly worried about my grammar.  My spelling compared to most in any reports I had to write up at work was always better than my co-workers and my handwriting was the best of the lot.  I was always worried that I would have been called out by inadvertently making grammar errors.  Sometimes, I forget and sometimes use the rules of Spanish instead of English, and English is my native tongue.  It just slips and I am not fluent in Spanish anymore, it just seems that when writing I happen to mix it up at times. It sounds strange, but its the truth, ok, enough rambling. 
 
I just want to say on one thread there was question asked in a very misspelled and really hard to read grammar and logical way.  Someone cared enough to interpreted it for the rest of us and a few post down someone put a link on the site. The site is SpellCheck, not only does it check your spelling.  I always did that before posting, but it checks your grammar.  I have a tendency to be wordy and wow, it really shows on SpellCheck. If only we had that 20 years ago. I could have run it through SpellCheck and not worry about grammar.  Damn, kids are lucky today, I remember arguing over what was considered too wordy and cut it down so easy with this, and with that.  I just have to say the grammar police should be on patrol.  Really there is no reason that a post should not be misspelled and grammatically correct.  Thank you grammar police, and now when I go back to college, I will not be afraid of writing term papers again.     
 
 


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rufio on 2009 August 08, 09:39:04
Sometimes, I forget and sometimes use the rules of Spanish instead of English, and English is my native tongue.  It just slips and I am not fluent in Spanish anymore, it just seems that when writing I happen to mix it up at times.

Just out of curiosity, what kinds of errors?
 
Quote
I just want to say on one thread there was question asked in a very misspelled and really hard to read grammar and logical way.  Someone cared enough to interpreted it for the rest of us and a few post down someone put a link on the site. The site is SpellCheck, not only does it check your spelling.  I always did that before posting, but it checks your grammar.  I have a tendency to be wordy and wow, it really shows on SpellCheck. If only we had that 20 years ago. I could have run it through SpellCheck and not worry about grammar.

I didn't see the site, but computerized grammar checkers generally suck balls.  Anyway, being too verbose is not a grammatical problem, so a "grammar checker" should not be concerned about that.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: maxon on 2009 August 08, 10:33:15
I just want to say on one thread there was question asked in a very misspelled and really hard to read grammar and logical way.  Someone cared enough to interpreted it for the rest of us and a few post down someone put a link on the site. The site is SpellCheck, not only does it check your spelling.  I always did that before posting, but it checks your grammar.  I have a tendency to be wordy and wow, it really shows on SpellCheck. If only we had that 20 years ago. I could have run it through SpellCheck and not worry about grammar. 

I shouldn't rely too heavily on something like that if I were you.  The effectiveness of grammar checkers is very limited.  Similarly, spell-checkers - there are many words that sound the same but are spelled differently depending on what they mean.  You need to know (no) this, so you use the correct word.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 August 08, 17:32:55
The Grammar Check on MS Word is notoriously dreadful; it has no idea about pronoun agreement, and there are perfectly grammatical sentences you can write (especially using nouns and verbs ending in -ing) that it will mark as incorrect. I have a grammar exercise I give my students that is entirely made up of sentences the Grammar Check interprets incorrectly.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: michaelrym on 2009 September 26, 11:27:31
Essentially, my position is that spelling, punctuation and grammar are craft; stylistics is art. Compare it to painting: any hamtard can throw paint at a canvas, and maybe sometimes even get an aesthetically pleasing result, but a real artist has command of technique and craft, and knows WHY he/she achieved an aesthetically pleasing result.

Sorry to nitpick, but I just cannot agree with that.

A person who has command of technique and craft is just a good craftsman. An artist also has - in addition - his own, unique vision of the piece of reality he's trying to represent or imitate. There are no 'real' artists and 'unreal' artists. There are just artists, craftsmen, and morons who think they're artists because it makes them feel good.

I'm also tempted to debate the point that an artist knows why he achieved an aesthetically pleasing result. Well, maybe in retrospect, given enough time... IMO in all the big artistic breakthroughs  there's something I'll call the X factor: a combination of special circumstances which makes the artist do something unusual, to attempt something he's not attempted before. Note that 'special' here does not mean 'extraordinary'; it can be something as simple as a nagging toothache (as one art historian has it, the inspiration behind Munch's "The Scream").

Interesting thread, this. Spent two hours smoking and reading instead of playing TS3. Now, I have a question for everyone here: How do you feel about these two text strings from our favourite game: Write A Non-Fiction Novel and Write A Fiction Novel?


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: shelleyb on 2009 October 20, 17:10:32
 ??? I'm brand new to this particular "forum," but WOW!

For those in law enforcement, please note that CORRECTLY, any small punctuation mark goes INSIDE the close quotation mark.  Large punctuation marks, such as ? or ! go on the outside.  There is a very interesting reason why this is true and it has nothing to do with grammar.  In the old days of typesetting, actual metal pieces were lined up to assemble a page of print.  It just so happened that typesetters noticed when they placed a small punctuation mark tile OUTSIDE a close quotation tile, the rest of the line of type was slanted.  However, when they placed the small tile INSIDE the close quotation tile, no slanting occured. 

(And yes, it is true, occured can also be spelled occurred, but in today's proper grammar rules most of those redundant consonants are being dumped.  I think the reason is that someone has figured out that a person's actual lifespan can be determined by how many syllables we use--errors such as irregardless and preventative--or the quantity of letters we use in writing during our lifetime and are teaching today's youth to JUST SAY NO.  Any yes, it is also true that one can start a sentence with And or But if they know how to do it correctly.  Enough of my rant and back to the lesson at hand, typesetting.)

The reason for the slanting type can be easily explained mathematically, but the typesetters didn't have time to sit around and speculate, like we obviously do--otherwise why the attraction to forums?  Those old typesetters had to get a paper or periodical or penny dreadful printed and on the street or they would be out of a job.  So, in closing to this particular topic, that is the reason small punctuation marks are placed inside a close quotation mark.  Interesting . . .  (The dots, by the way, are called an ellipsis.  Two dashes placed one right after the other is still called a dash, it just places more emphasis on the break in the sentence.)

I haven't read through this whole thread--just the first and last pages--but wondered if a lesson on split infinitives or past participles has been provided.  I have been out of school for quite a while, doing technical writing by the way, and find that I have trouble remembering the rules for lay, lay, and laid.  Other interesting facts:  (and use of a colon is the proper punctuation mark to use in this situation seeing that I am beginning a list, separated by semicolons) school-aged children today are being taught to use very few commas in their writing (see the above explanation about determining lifespan) but technical writers are encouraged to use many commas so that a reader knows where to stop and digest the technical information they have just consumed; no one in today's society has any clue when to use -ible and when to use -able; very few people know when to use its and when to use it's.  Again, end rant.

Oops, one more thing to add.  I think it is appalling that there is a law enforcement task force which is allowed to use vulgarities and abusive language.  I may be inviting a nasty retort, or nobody reads this thread any more out of lack of interest.  In either case, vilifying someone else by insinuating that they are unintelligent is worse, by far, than overlooking some inadvertent misspelled word or text-speak.  If one can't understand the message someone is sending, a civilized person politely asks for clarification.  Name-calling is juvenile and should be below the standards of someone whose purpose is to monitor the language used on this website.  As you can clearly see by my signature line, you have hit a huge, throbbing nerve when you insult someone's cognitive abilities.  I came here to get the "awesomemod" and thought I would check out some of the forums to see what kind of information is being presented.  I was hoping for something better than what EA has to offer, but after reading a few entries on this thread, I may just satisfy myself with checking in periodically to see if any new updates to the mod are available.

If there is still any interest in this thread, I will look here a couple of times to see if there are any takers . . . (again, an ellipsis.)  I would be most honored to hear back from the originator of the thread (did someone assign the job of GRAMMAR POLICE to this individual or was it an assumed task?), and especially gratified to hear from the originator of the actual website.

Follow Up:  I have glanced over my missive and deleted most, not all, of the derogatory language directed at the grammarian (look it up, it's a valid word).  However, I was in a negative emotional state when I wrote it and pounded it out very quickly.  Some things you may notice are run-on sentences, verbosity, and continuous insults directed to those who are obviously not as erudite as they believe themselves to be.  IF (and I emphasize if) anyone looks at this thread anymore and finds a misspelled word, I apologize in advance.  That is the price you sometimes pay when adept with a keyboard.  Otherwise, the editorial field would be significantly "downsized."

End of rant.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 October 20, 17:24:42
Wow, the number of inaccuracies per word here is pretty high, considering how long the post is.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: snowbawl on 2009 October 20, 17:45:59
Word Vomit

Oh go fuck a retard and call yourself a Good Samaritan.  We do not care.

Here, you can have "{" as a parting gift.  Thanks for playing!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 October 20, 18:45:46
??? I'm brand new to this particular "forum," but WOW!
That was the most presumptuous and condescending introduction I've seen in quite some time. I especially liked the part where you chose to claim "too F to spell" and ended your pompous grammar screed by declaring that you couldn't be arsed to find and fix your errors. I feel honoured to have witnessed this emerging profile in courage.

Quote
I think it is appalling that there is a law enforcement task force which is allowed to use vulgarities and abusive language.  I may be inviting a nasty retort, or nobody reads this thread any more out of lack of interest...
In that case, I would like very much to introduce you to the word "fucktwittery". And please do feel free to enjoy that non-line-slanting, post-quotation-mark punctuation, free of charge.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 October 20, 21:58:04
(http://wikka.moreawesomethanyou.com/images/9/9b/Grammarfert.png)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: chaos on 2009 October 21, 00:02:10
@shellyb: All that ranting about grammar and you still exhibit which/that confusion. Grammar cat is not amused.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 October 22, 01:26:28
TL;DR. I skimmed the reaaaaaalllllly long rant.  Am I missing something? 

-He/she explains typsetting-induced punctuation
-redundant consonants (as opposed to unneccesary?)  -oops )?
-ellipses, dots and dashes for those who really don't know
-commas in technology
-the -ible/-able debate
-the use of vulgarities by grammar police to spork us dumbasses
-and an admitted unwillingness to correct his/her own typos/mistakes in a grammar thread

Was the point to inform, impress or redress?  Evidently, the rant missed its intended mark, or it would be clear.  I'm assuming the point is to lecture us about the use of vulgarities - he/she believes we should be addressing language, rather than the effective use of written communication. I don't claim to have superior writing skills, but personally, I think the use of the pronoun "fucktard" in the place of an incredible nuisance's username is a perfectly acceptable, grammatically correct way to say, "stfu."  This site is not for 12's who shouldn't be around such communication.



Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 October 22, 13:15:46
(The dots, by the way, are called an ellipsis.  Two dashes placed one right after the other is still called a dash, it just places more emphasis on the break in the sentence.)
blah blah blah
(and use of a colon is the proper punctuation mark to use in this situation seeing that I am beginning a list, separated by semicolons)
blah blah blah
no one in today's society has any clue when to use -ible and when to use -able; very few people know when to use its and when to use it's.  Again, end rant.

Gee, thanks so much for those condescending explanations. (That single dot I just used is a full stop by the way. It's used to end sentences.) I'm so glad you arrived on the scene armed with all this mind-blowing grammar knowledge, I was lost in a mire of semicolons and exclamation marks before you came along. Also, I think you're hanging around the wrong people if your fellows don't understand when to use its and it's.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 October 22, 17:47:32
CAGE MATCH: rufio vs. shellywhosits.

TWO SELF-PROCLAIMED GRAMMAR "EXPERTS" ENTER!

With luck, none emerge unscathed.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: shelleyb on 2009 October 22, 22:50:19
 ;D Hilllllarious!  Let me start off by redirecting anyone's belief that I am insulting the forum community at large.  The whole purpose of my first post was to slam the GRAMMAR POLICE.  I can see from the replies that the grammar mafia were, as expected, the most insulting and leanest on value.  I apologize for sounding so pompous to the forum community.  Had I made it clearer that all my comments were for the benefit of the grammar mafia and their own unjustifiable (-able/-ible) arrogance, the rest of you might have looked at that post from a different perspective.

It's so funny that there was no interest in this thread for almost a month until I read one post mocking someone's intelligence, got pissed off and launched on a rant.  It was unforgivable of me (-ible/-able).  I'm really too busy living a life in the real world to waste much precious time in a virtual one, though it seems virtual worlds are preferable (-able/-ible) to those of you beating up on anyone and everyone who decides to post a reply to your sacred thread.  Look at how much work you put into "amusing" avatars and badges to represent yourselves.  As I stated, I only came to this site to get a mod and thought that a thread initiated by GRAMMAR POLICE might be informative and intelligent.  I was mistaken.

I'm amazed that this thread is even allowed to exist, given the ignorance of those purporting to be its mafia squad.   You see, here is an example of IT'S and ITS being properly used.  I probably shouldn't have mentioned one of my pet peeves in the first place since you misunderstood my intent.  Your grammar mafia seem to be truly confused about which to use when.  And my FELLOWS, as you called them, would laugh me out of the room if they knew I visited this type of forum, let alone posted something.

The type of exchange I am used to directs responses to the originator and posters are encouraged to include additional information regarding the topic introduced.  Many of those posts can be quite long, being of a technical nature, and often include links to sites with even more information than is being given in the post.  I was merely utilizing habits I am familiar with when posting to forum threads.

I do appreciate the fact that anyone even made an effort to respond to my post.  I'll try address each of you in turn:

I noticed some of the mafia corrections in here pertained to the use of punctuation marks, but without any clear understanding of how they work.  Therefore, a simple lesson seemed appropriate, for the benefit of the mafia cretins, in the dynamics of how some punctuation rules came into being--from pure mechanics instead of grammatical rules.  There actually is a distinction between punctuation rules and the rules of proper grammar, just as there is a distinction for misspelling.  Just an FYI for those with so little to do that they spend all their time inaccurately making fun of everyone's inaccuracies (per word).  By the way, thanks to the individual for contributing the "full-stop" comment.  I completely forgot that what we call a "period" used to be called "full-stop."

You may want to look up redundant and unnecessary in an unabridged dictionary, though.  Sometimes the meanings of words are truncated in an abridged dictionary in an effort to save space which/that causes people to use the wrong word in the wrong context.  In the computer age, the definition of redundancy has changed from its original meaning and that is the definition that/which is most commonly found in an abridged dictionary.  Also, the term effective is subjective, not objective.  In case anyone is unfamiliar with these words, subjective (in this case) means that/which a topic is subject to a person's own biases.  To be objective is more concrete and agreed upon by the majority.  (The reason I am explaining the difference between these two words and their application is that I won't be checking back to see if anyone else misunderstands me.)  I admit that I fall into the subjective mode when viewing the effectiveness of the written communication being used by the mafia.  It falls miserably short of the mark of a real grammarian.

True, my meaning in that original post got lost in the quagmire.  I was HOT when I wrote it.  Clearly stated:

#1-That post was directed to the ORIGINATOR of this thread and others titling themselves the grammar mafia, not all posters in general.  Don't be so sensitive when you aren't even being insulted (by me, anyway).

#2-I don't care how vulgar or profane you are, in general.  It's an oxymoron, though, for people to declare themselves to be grammarians and yet be unable to express themselves in a civil and educated tone.

#3-Don't declare yourself an expert in something that you obviously don't have a broad command of, like the English language.

#4-Be more sensitive to people's mental capacities.  After all, look at how obviously limited your own capacities are.

No, I didn't believe typos would be an issue on this thread.  By admitting that I probably left behind typos shouldn't offend any of you when text-speak and acronyms are freely used here.  I meant that I'm not perfect, but I'm also not trying to pass myself off as GRAMMAR POLICE.  The length of my former post, and this one as well, should serve to inform the reader that I am able to pound out loads of crap onto a computer quickly.  Anyway, at least I put forth the effort of glancing back over my post (and deleting my more egregious insults).  To be frank, I blasted the grammar mafia pretty harshly before I edited my first post.  Can you imagine if I hadn't edited it? 

I didn't read 99% of the gibberish between page one and page 99999, so I don't understand the post about being cage-matched against someone else.  Perhaps it's another person trying to educate the great unwashed in the grammar mafia?  (The "great unwashed" is a derogatory remark from a long time ago and has dropped out of common use; it has nothing to do with hygiene.  I just like to pull it out to use on people who feel superior to others without any merit for their assumption.)

One person's which is another person's that.  Try reading, a book.  A book on grammar might be a good place to start.  You may learn something.  I have to "read up" on current grammar trends constantly for CPEs that/which are required for my job.  Oh, I'm really sorry!  My former and current intent is not to insult the forum contributors as a whole, just the mafia!

Grammar cat and grammar ferret might want to be more concerned about the "presents" coming out of their own mouths (expressed typographically, of course) instead of dropping one in someone's shoe.

We are living in the 21st century now.  The invention of the typewriter actually took care of the line-slanting problem.  The intent of that tidbit of information was a direct insult to the mafia's attempts to use punctuation rules that they clearly don't understand the origin of.  Knowing why you place which characters where can make it easier to remember what the rules are.  Stupid of me to include that before, but the generous side of me was trying to impart some wisdom on the mafia cretins.  (I just love the word cretin.)

I believe the final post that must be responded to regards how honoured an individual felt after skipping over my little foray into the world of grammar, which/that was directed at the mafia and not the posters in general.  Thank you.  I'm glad I could bring a little honour to your day.  Just kidding; I know you were being sarcastic.

I'm sorry if you responded to my post and I didn't get around to you.  As stated many times before, my post was directed at the grammar mafia and I was really hoping to hear from some of its duly initiated members.

Great job students!  At least I got a dead thread going again.  Now you kiddies will have to cross verbal blades with each other without parental guidance.  I said I would check back to see if anyone reads this thread anymore since it is nonsensical (a real word; look it up in an unabridged dictionary--just a musical way of saying nonsense).  I have done so.  Now I must say goodbye; to say farewell implies that we will be meeting each other again, and that (which?) will not happen.  I know this will reduce the few of you in the mafia who actually deigned to respond to tears, but different paths and all that . . . (ellipsis)

P.S. (Or Post-script to the nit picky)  I hope I gave the reader the option of choosing between which and that every time I used one of those words.  To the person who found my laziness in correcting my own typos funny, this next line should be a hoot.  I didn't go back over this particular installment in English 101!  Hurray!  I think my intentions have been made clear; the mafia needs a makeover and should allow conversations to flow organically.  If a post is indecipherable (-ible/-able), simply ask for clarification.  Less insulting heat may lead to more valuable exchange.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 October 22, 23:06:25
You seem to have assumed that posting a self-congratulatory and arrogant comment full of glaring errors and complaining about the Grammar Police entitles you to have your opinion taken seriously.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tingeling on 2009 October 22, 23:39:06
;D Hilllllarious!  Let me start off by redirecting anyone's belief that I am insulting the forum community at large.  The whole purpose of my first post was to slam the GRAMMAR POLICE.  I can see from the replies that the grammar mafia were, as expected, the most insulting and leanest on value.

If you had lurked and read some of the grammar police's earlier posts, you would be surprised by the fact that their entertainment value is in high regard around here. 

I apologize for sounding so pompous to the forum community.  Had I made it clearer that all my comments were for the benefit of the grammar mafia and their own unjustifiable (-able/-ible) arrogance, the rest of you might have looked at that post from a different perspective.

Hmm, so what you are saying is essentially FO Grammar police, I'm not arrogant, you are! Meet Mr. mirror. BTW, not all of MATY are grammar police, yet most of us expect others to adhere to the current grammar rules. Which means for me that if I'm called out on a grammatical error (which happens from time to time) I make a note of it and mend my ways. Trust me, it's a learning experience.

It's so funny that there was no interest in this thread for almost a month until I read one post mocking someone's intelligence, got pissed off and launched on a rant.  It was unforgivable of me (-ible/-able).  I'm really too busy living a life in the real world to waste much precious time in a virtual one, though it seems virtual worlds are preferable (-able/-ible) to those of you beating up on anyone and everyone who decides to post a reply to your sacred thread.  Look at how much work you put into "amusing" avatars and badges to represent yourselves.  As I stated, I only came to this site to get a mod and thought that a thread initiated by GRAMMAR POLICE might be informative and intelligent.  I was mistaken.

Yes, yes, this has been stated before by other n00bs. Every time they get the question: Why are you here then? Why do you care so much? Right, you were beaten up by the Grammar police. Poor you.

I'm amazed that this thread is even allowed to exist, given the ignorance of those purporting to be its mafia squad.   You see, here is an example of IT'S and ITS being properly used.  I probably shouldn't have mentioned one of my pet peeves in the first place since you misunderstood my intent.  Your grammar mafia seem to be truly confused about which to use when.  And my FELLOWS, as you called them, would laugh me out of the room if they knew I visited this type of forum, let alone posted something.

So, now we have a mafia? Cool!

The type of exchange I am used to directs responses to the originator and posters are encouraged to include additional information regarding the topic introduced.  Many of those posts can be quite long, being of a technical nature, and often include links to sites with even more information than is being given in the post.  I was merely utilizing habits I am familiar with when posting to forum threads.

That is well and all, but here people are advised to lurk and to read the faq, preferrably more times than one. Also, it is a good thing to do a bit of research so that forum threads don't get bloated and to make it easier on others to find the technical info you search for.

Looong lecture on grammar.

Look, if you want to become a grammar police that bad, sign up with Rufio. She will help you out.

True, my meaning in that original post got lost in the quagmire.  I was HOT when I wrote it.  Clearly stated:

#1-That post was directed to the ORIGINATOR of this thread and others titling themselves the grammar mafia, not all posters in general.  Don't be so sensitive when you aren't even being insulted (by me, anyway).

See, here all is fair game. That means there is no privacy on the board. Type something and you better expect others to respond, even those who haven't started the thread.

#2-I don't care how vulgar or profane you are, in general.  It's an oxymoron, though, for people to declare themselves to be grammarians and yet be unable to express themselves in a civil and educated tone.

Have you talked to the Tard?

#3-Don't declare yourself an expert in something that you obviously don't have a broad command of, like the English language.

I'm not an expert, nor will I ever be. I do however put in an effort to learn me some english grammar and consider the posts by some members here to be highly educational.

#4-Be more sensitive to people's mental capacities.  After all, look at how obviously limited your own capacities are.

You really did take a wrong turn at the intersection.

No, I didn't believe typos would be an issue on this thread.  By admitting that I probably left behind typos shouldn't offend any of you when text-speak and acronyms are freely used here.  I meant that I'm not perfect, but I'm also not trying to pass myself off as GRAMMAR POLICE.  The length of my former post, and this one as well, should serve to inform the reader that I am able to pound out loads of crap onto a computer quickly.  Anyway, at least I put forth the effort of glancing back over my post (and deleting my more egregious insults).  To be frank, I blasted the grammar mafia pretty harshly before I edited my first post.  Can you imagine if I hadn't edited it?

Um, the thread is called Grammar POLICE. Followed by what could be construed as a warning. Are you blind? You don't want to be Grammar Police you say, yet earlier in your post you make an effort of correcting some of the Grammar police. I don't get it.

I didn't read 99% of the gibberish between page one and page 99999, so I don't understand the post about being cage-matched against someone else.  Perhaps it's another person trying to educate the great unwashed in the grammar mafia?  (The "great unwashed" is a derogatory remark from a long time ago and has dropped out of common use; it has nothing to do with hygiene.  I just like to pull it out to use on people who feel superior to others without any merit for their assumption.)

A cage match means that you should try fighting with someone. If you don't understand a saying, try googling it. Or even better, search the forum for related topics. And no, it is a meme. It was funny.

One person's which is another person's that.  Try reading, a book.  A book on grammar might be a good place to start.  You may learn something.  I have to "read up" on current grammar trends constantly for CPEs that/which are required for my job.  Oh, I'm really sorry!  My former and current intent is not to insult the forum contributors as a whole, just the mafia!

Bad grammar police, yeah, we got that by now.

Grammar cat and grammar ferret might want to be more concerned about the "presents" coming out of their own mouths (expressed typographically, of course) instead of dropping one in someone's shoe.

Again, if you had any knowledge of MATY's culture, you would have brushed that off with a laugh and moved on. Ferrets and cats can never be wrong!

We are living in the 21st century now.  The invention of the typewriter actually took care of the line-slanting problem.  The intent of that tidbit of information was a direct insult to the mafia's attempts to use punctuation rules that they clearly don't understand the origin of.  Knowing why you place which characters where can make it easier to remember what the rules are.  Stupid of me to include that before, but the generous side of me was trying to impart some wisdom on the mafia cretins.  (I just love the word cretin.)

Are we really? I wasn't aware of that. Again, if you want to apply for Grammar Police, contact Rufio.

Great job students!  At least I got a dead thread going again.  Now you kiddies will have to cross verbal blades with each other without parental guidance.  I said I would check back to see if anyone reads this thread anymore since it is nonsensical (a real word; look it up in an unabridged dictionary--just a musical way of saying nonsense).  I have done so.  Now I must say goodbye; to say farewell implies that we will be meeting each other again, and that (which?) will not happen.  I know this will reduce the few of you in the mafia who actually deigned to respond to tears, but different paths and all that . . . (ellipsis)

We shall weep for you. No, seriously. Go.

P.S. (Or Post-script to the nit picky)  I hope I gave the reader the option of choosing between which and that every time I used one of those words.  To the person who found my laziness in correcting my own typos funny, this next line should be a hoot.  I didn't go back over this particular installment in English 101!  Hurray!  I think my intentions have been made clear; the mafia needs a makeover and should allow conversations to flow organically.  If a post is indecipherable (-ible/-able), simply ask for clarification.  Less insulting heat may lead to more valuable exchange.

Actually, it seemed like you weren't too sure how to use those words. We do have valuable exchange. With people that are less insulted. It is funny though how many come in here weekly to try and change the forum only to say Buh-bye shortly thereafter. Have a nice trip, shelleyb!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: toad on 2009 October 22, 23:49:40
Hey, smellyb:
READ THE FAQS OR GTFO. Also, lurk MOAR. This forum has its own culture, don't think it'll change just because you're a Special Suzie.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 October 22, 23:50:35
TLDRTard appears to be under the delusion that Grammar Police are self-styled, rather than being officially titled, and that this thread came about out of my massive hubris rather than in consultation with Pescado about how to handle the influx of the illiterate. HEY TLDRTard, you might want to check your facts before you fap, next time.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: soozelwoozel on 2009 October 23, 00:16:47

 By the way, thanks to the individual for contributing the "full-stop" comment.  I completely forgot that what we call a "period" used to be called "full-stop."


Oh, I see you are a USian. Over here in the UK, we still use the term "full stop". How very outdated of us, eh? Oh, I feel so backward all of a sudden. Woe is me.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: socurious on 2009 October 23, 00:31:51
I'm almost positive that that tome was supposed to be a scathing rant filled with incisive wit (and a point), but I have no idea since my eyes started to bleed.  I've used textbooks shorter than that post.  

Rohina, I laughed out loud after reading your post.  Love the new moniker - incredibly fitting.  Does anyone else know you are quick-witted and outright funny?  I know you're mean but, dang!  


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 October 23, 00:37:32
Does anyone else know you are quick-witted and outright funny?  I know you're mean but, dang! 

Speed is my sekrit weapon. You should see how fast I capshun.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: BattyCoda on 2009 October 23, 01:16:09
<deleted crap>
  The length of my former post, and this one as well, should serve to inform the reader that I am able to pound out loads of crap onto a computer quickly. 
<more deleted crap>

Yes.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: TheQuietOne on 2009 October 26, 17:24:59
;D Hilllllarious!  Let me start off by redirecting anyone's belief that I am insulting the forum community at large.  The whole purpose of my first post was to slam the GRAMMAR POLICE.  I can see from the replies that the grammar mafia were, as expected, the most insulting and leanest on value.  I apologize for sounding so pompous to the forum community.  Had I made it clearer that all my comments were for the benefit of the grammar mafia and their own unjustifiable (-able/-ible) arrogance, the rest of you might have looked at that post from a different perspective.

Dear munchkin, we don't feel insulted. I feel incredibly bored by a windy rant by yet another fucktard n00b convinced they are some Speshul Snowflake.

I'm counting seconds untill smellyb breaks down in sobs demanding to know how can we be so mean to her and she only wanted to insult some people not all of the... sob... community and she knows oh so much about so many things and why can't we all get along and live in peace and prosper and grammarians are just so mean and she has... sob... assburgers!

Bets anyone?

I might be less bored then. I like to see them cry.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 October 26, 17:45:12
I might be less bored then. I like to see them cry.

Pescado made an aspiration for that, but he won't release it to the general peasantry.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: keesa on 2009 November 11, 15:30:23
Boring! ***Yawn***!


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Tsarina on 2009 November 11, 16:40:54
Boring! ***Yawn***!
(http://i33.tinypic.com/15dm8ac.gif)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Clara M Johnson on 2009 November 15, 17:27:16
;D Hilllllarious!  Let me start off by redirecting anyone's belief that I am insulting the forum community at large.  The whole purpose of my first post was to slam the GRAMMAR POLICE.  I can see from the replies that the grammar mafia were, as expected, the most insulting and leanest on value.  I apologize for sounding so pompous to the forum community.  Had I made it clearer that all my comments were for the benefit of the grammar mafia and their own unjustifiable (-able/-ible) arrogance, the rest of you might have looked at that post from a different perspective.

It's so funny that there was no interest in this thread for almost a month until I read one post mocking someone's intelligence, got pissed off and launched on a rant.  It was unforgivable of me (-ible/-able).  I'm really too busy living a life in the real world to waste much precious time in a virtual one, though it seems virtual worlds are preferable (-able/-ible) to those of you beating up on anyone and everyone who decides to post a reply to your sacred thread.  Look at how much work you put into "amusing" avatars and badges to represent yourselves.  As I stated, I only came to this site to get a mod and thought that a thread initiated by GRAMMAR POLICE might be informative and intelligent.  I was mistaken.

I'm amazed that this thread is even allowed to exist, given the ignorance of those purporting to be its mafia squad.   You see, here is an example of IT'S and ITS being properly used.  I probably shouldn't have mentioned one of my pet peeves in the first place since you misunderstood my intent.  Your grammar mafia seem to be truly confused about which to use when.  And my FELLOWS, as you called them, would laugh me out of the room if they knew I visited this type of forum, let alone posted something.

The type of exchange I am used to directs responses to the originator and posters are encouraged to include additional information regarding the topic introduced.  Many of those posts can be quite long, being of a technical nature, and often include links to sites with even more information than is being given in the post.  I was merely utilizing habits I am familiar with when posting to forum threads.

I do appreciate the fact that anyone even made an effort to respond to my post.  I'll try address each of you in turn:

I noticed some of the mafia corrections in here pertained to the use of punctuation marks, but without any clear understanding of how they work.  Therefore, a simple lesson seemed appropriate, for the benefit of the mafia cretins, in the dynamics of how some punctuation rules came into being--from pure mechanics instead of grammatical rules.  There actually is a distinction between punctuation rules and the rules of proper grammar, just as there is a distinction for misspelling.  Just an FYI for those with so little to do that they spend all their time inaccurately making fun of everyone's inaccuracies (per word).  By the way, thanks to the individual for contributing the "full-stop" comment.  I completely forgot that what we call a "period" used to be called "full-stop."

You may want to look up redundant and unnecessary in an unabridged dictionary, though.  Sometimes the meanings of words are truncated in an abridged dictionary in an effort to save space which/that causes people to use the wrong word in the wrong context.  In the computer age, the definition of redundancy has changed from its original meaning and that is the definition that/which is most commonly found in an abridged dictionary.  Also, the term effective is subjective, not objective.  In case anyone is unfamiliar with these words, subjective (in this case) means that/which a topic is subject to a person's own biases.  To be objective is more concrete and agreed upon by the majority.  (The reason I am explaining the difference between these two words and their application is that I won't be checking back to see if anyone else misunderstands me.)  I admit that I fall into the subjective mode when viewing the effectiveness of the written communication being used by the mafia.  It falls miserably short of the mark of a real grammarian.

True, my meaning in that original post got lost in the quagmire.  I was HOT when I wrote it.  Clearly stated:

#1-That post was directed to the ORIGINATOR of this thread and others titling themselves the grammar mafia, not all posters in general.  Don't be so sensitive when you aren't even being insulted (by me, anyway).

#2-I don't care how vulgar or profane you are, in general.  It's an oxymoron, though, for people to declare themselves to be grammarians and yet be unable to express themselves in a civil and educated tone.

#3-Don't declare yourself an expert in something that you obviously don't have a broad command of, like the English language.

#4-Be more sensitive to people's mental capacities.  After all, look at how obviously limited your own capacities are.

No, I didn't believe typos would be an issue on this thread.  By admitting that I probably left behind typos shouldn't offend any of you when text-speak and acronyms are freely used here.  I meant that I'm not perfect, but I'm also not trying to pass myself off as GRAMMAR POLICE.  The length of my former post, and this one as well, should serve to inform the reader that I am able to pound out loads of crap onto a computer quickly.  Anyway, at least I put forth the effort of glancing back over my post (and deleting my more egregious insults).  To be frank, I blasted the grammar mafia pretty harshly before I edited my first post.  Can you imagine if I hadn't edited it? 

I didn't read 99% of the gibberish between page one and page 99999, so I don't understand the post about being cage-matched against someone else.  Perhaps it's another person trying to educate the great unwashed in the grammar mafia?  (The "great unwashed" is a derogatory remark from a long time ago and has dropped out of common use; it has nothing to do with hygiene.  I just like to pull it out to use on people who feel superior to others without any merit for their assumption.)

One person's which is another person's that.  Try reading, a book.  A book on grammar might be a good place to start.  You may learn something.  I have to "read up" on current grammar trends constantly for CPEs that/which are required for my job.  Oh, I'm really sorry!  My former and current intent is not to insult the forum contributors as a whole, just the mafia!

Grammar cat and grammar ferret might want to be more concerned about the "presents" coming out of their own mouths (expressed typographically, of course) instead of dropping one in someone's shoe.

We are living in the 21st century now.  The invention of the typewriter actually took care of the line-slanting problem.  The intent of that tidbit of information was a direct insult to the mafia's attempts to use punctuation rules that they clearly don't understand the origin of.  Knowing why you place which characters where can make it easier to remember what the rules are.  Stupid of me to include that before, but the generous side of me was trying to impart some wisdom on the mafia cretins.  (I just love the word cretin.)

I believe the final post that must be responded to regards how honoured an individual felt after skipping over my little foray into the world of grammar, which/that was directed at the mafia and not the posters in general.  Thank you.  I'm glad I could bring a little honour to your day.  Just kidding; I know you were being sarcastic.

I'm sorry if you responded to my post and I didn't get around to you.  As stated many times before, my post was directed at the grammar mafia and I was really hoping to hear from some of its duly initiated members.

Great job students!  At least I got a dead thread going again.  Now you kiddies will have to cross verbal blades with each other without parental guidance.  I said I would check back to see if anyone reads this thread anymore since it is nonsensical (a real word; look it up in an unabridged dictionary--just a musical way of saying nonsense).  I have done so.  Now I must say goodbye; to say farewell implies that we will be meeting each other again, and that (which?) will not happen.  I know this will reduce the few of you in the mafia who actually deigned to respond to tears, but different paths and all that . . . (ellipsis)

P.S. (Or Post-script to the nit picky)  I hope I gave the reader the option of choosing between which and that every time I used one of those words.  To the person who found my laziness in correcting my own typos funny, this next line should be a hoot.  I didn't go back over this particular installment in English 101!  Hurray!  I think my intentions have been made clear; the mafia needs a makeover and should allow conversations to flow organically.  If a post is indecipherable (-ible/-able), simply ask for clarification.  Less insulting heat may lead to more valuable exchange.

I just wanted to say I love your Avatar Shelleyb! ;)


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: rohina on 2009 November 15, 17:28:42
Ladies and Gentlemen, I think we may have a contender for Tard of the Year.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Liz on 2009 November 16, 01:05:28
ridonkulous and pointless quotage
I just wanted to say I love your Avatar Shelleyb! ;)

This post makes babby Jebus cry.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: kiki on 2009 November 16, 01:23:26
Does anyone have any fresh RETAR-DOH cards on hand? I'm fairly certain that shellyb covered a significant chunk of one and may just be going for the clean sweep.


Title: Re: Important notice from the GRAMMAR POLICE. Plz read. This means you.
Post by: Lorelei on 2009 November 16, 05:32:00
I wonder if our shiny new tard is an ex-AOLer. They used to be quite fond of quoting entire (strings of) posts just to add "Me, too!" at the bottom. Most people have figured out that to do this is stupid by now.