Crosswords8 mins ago
Why Do So Many Native English Speakers Write "your" When They Mean "you're"?
88 Answers
Do they really not know the difference or what? And how can so many people have problems with it?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Shakespeare probably didn't make up that many words - he's just left the best preserved record of the words he did use; lesser authors' manuscripts have vanished, and oral usage has left no traces. And a lot of what Shakespeare did was using old words in new ways (turning nouns into verbs and so on).
//I assumed, evidently wrongly, that if poor grammar and punctuation upset you, then people making words up to suit themselves willy nilly would have given you a fit :) //
Even a pedant, like myself, has no objection to newly made-up words. I do it myself, to relieve the boredom. I don't often expose them to public scrutiny, mind you.
New words represent creativity, misusing old ones is decay. If someone misused one of the words -you- so rumbumptiously made up, then you'd be justifiably upset by it.
I can only imagine but it's on the same level as writing a song and then hearing it being mangled by someone in a karaoke bar,
Even a pedant, like myself, has no objection to newly made-up words. I do it myself, to relieve the boredom. I don't often expose them to public scrutiny, mind you.
New words represent creativity, misusing old ones is decay. If someone misused one of the words -you- so rumbumptiously made up, then you'd be justifiably upset by it.
I can only imagine but it's on the same level as writing a song and then hearing it being mangled by someone in a karaoke bar,
Your right, Douglas....that's not what the op was doing and it looks as if I jumped on him for that....
It happens so often now on hear.....a member picked up for the above or for.....their they are....on there feet.....that I get grumpy at the unkindness far to quickly.....
Apologies, State...but if you do do it.....I'll be on your tale.....☺
It happens so often now on hear.....a member picked up for the above or for.....their they are....on there feet.....that I get grumpy at the unkindness far to quickly.....
Apologies, State...but if you do do it.....I'll be on your tale.....☺
I'm not sure the parallel chilldoubt draws with getting sums wrong is correct. Mathematical results are absolute and universal. Two plus two is always four, up to how you name those numbers. But language is fluid. It changes between and within generations. "Yours" doesn't need an apostrophe before the s. Two hundred years ago it did though (eg jane Austen in pride and prejudice). A hundred years from now it may well have an apostrophe again.
Fluidity is at the heart of language. Given that we can't afford to be too rigid about language "rules" that are actually guidelines anyway, and more to with convention. I'd certainly teach these cconventions to children though because it is a useful life skill to be able to construct a coherent sentence. But beyond a certain point it becomes less worthwhile mentioning it. As long as the meaning is clear and/ or obvious then you may as well leave it. And clarity of meaning is what language is for anyway. Obviously if you don't understand what they mean you should be entitled to ask for clarification but that's different.
Fluidity is at the heart of language. Given that we can't afford to be too rigid about language "rules" that are actually guidelines anyway, and more to with convention. I'd certainly teach these cconventions to children though because it is a useful life skill to be able to construct a coherent sentence. But beyond a certain point it becomes less worthwhile mentioning it. As long as the meaning is clear and/ or obvious then you may as well leave it. And clarity of meaning is what language is for anyway. Obviously if you don't understand what they mean you should be entitled to ask for clarification but that's different.
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