Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Common misuse of the English Language examples
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Now obvious 'typos' are exempt.We all all make them.
ect for 'etc' .
of cause for of course .
Any more glaringly obvious ones?
ect for 'etc' .
of cause for of course .
Any more glaringly obvious ones?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.@DT - I can't get too worked up about the split infinitive. It is often thought that the rule was introduced by Dryden in the 17th century, who reasoned that if Latin didn't have them, neither should English. However, according to Wikipedia this may be a myth:
http://en.wikipedia.o...m_classical_languages
For me, English is made all the richer by the famous split infinitive in Star Trek.
http://en.wikipedia.o...m_classical_languages
For me, English is made all the richer by the famous split infinitive in Star Trek.
One common example is when people write "should of/would of/could of" when they clearly mean "should have/would have/could have". Many are unable to spell the "definite/separate/desperate" trio. My boss gave a lecture the other day that made me wonder if he used to be a grocer as every plural contained an unnecessary apostrophe ("Goal's and objective's").
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