Impossible!These people probably know English, but nothing else ...
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Impossible!These people probably know English, but nothing else ...
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the chicken clique
The what now?
Probably best not to go into it lest I done a dark clucking horde
Lose and loose drives me batty.
I can't bring to mind any recent heresy, but I know I see it every day.
Like, most of my close friends are Norwegian, bless them. But they wreak such havoc upon the English language... and Norwegian, too!
Most of my friends aren't what you'd call intellectuals. They are slapdash as fuck when it comes to language. Do I love them any less? Of course not. But it does grind on me when people won't fucking use fuckin words correctly. I went to all this trouble learning English, and now I see the disrespect even native speakers heap on it. It ain't right, man, it just ain't right!
My favorite gendered noun is aviatrix.
Imagine "I'm Trixie — I'll be your waitrix tonight. "
Where a conclusion leads to what has been decided; like a process, for instance
A conclusion is what a process leads to. It may then lead to a decision, but it is not, in itself, necessarily a step to a decision. An investigative process can lead to a conclusion about who the murderer is.
Conclusion can also just mean "end".
I watched Dame Emma Thompson on Colbert's show the other night, and she referred to herself as an "actor," not an "actress." To quote Wikipedia:My favorite gendered noun is aviatrix.
Imagine "I'm Trixie — I'll be your waitrix tonight. "
The lexicographer Kory Stamper wrote on the subject of Jimmy Carter's pronunciation of the word "nuclear" as "newcular":
"Jimmy Carter spent his time in the U.S. Navy working on propulsion systems for nuclear submarines, acting as an engineering officer of a nuclear power plant, and actually being lowered into a nuclear reactor that had melted down in order to dismantle it. To my mind, he has earned the right to pronounce 'nuclear' however he damned well pleases."
That's all very well for Jimmy Carter, but unfortunately "new-cular" is spreading,
In the US, several groups want to ban Huckleberry Finn from their libraries, on the grounds that Twain used the word "nigger" as profusely as any teenager of the deep south would. But they'd clearly missed the point that the whole story arc of the book was the Huck's gradual repudiation of that region's mores. To expunge the word from a new printing of the book might make it easier to sell to southern school boards, but it would diminish Huck's personal transformation.
I'd rather put in a forward to the book explaining that Twain was representing the society as it was and as it thought, a society that Huck eventually abandoned.
It does date them. Although Fleming excelled in writing about places and food, he couldn't write American dialog for sour apples, so if you're looking for how Americans actually spoke, you wouldn't find it there.Agreed. On the subject of the N-word (and other outdated attitudes to women, blacks, Asians and gays):
I have read, and very much enjoyed, the work of Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler and Ian Fleming. All three include language and attitudes that were common in the USA from the 1920s to the 1960s, but so what? It doesn't make their work any less enjoyable or important.
Agreed.Thirdly and finally, the BBC has come under pressure to ban Fawlty Towers, because the character of "the Major" uses the N-word to describe the West Indies cricket team. (To be clear, the Major doesn't use this in a derogatory way, and everyone else in the show thinks that he is outdated. As far as I can see, it's simply a way to show that he's unthinkingly racist).
I saw a heavily edited version of that movie on American network television, and it was painful to watch. No farts in the bean scene, all references to the N-word either edited or bleeped out. When the original movie was previewed by the studio bosses, they enumerated all those things in their list of things to cut, and Mel Brooks wrote down every item and said, Yes, sir. I'll take care of it." But they were contractually obligated to give him final cut, and he threw the list away when he left the room.I'm curious. If we ban anything that uses language or attitudes that we find objectionable, where will it end? Perhaps we should ban Blazing Saddles, simply because the entire town (and even Cleavon Little) uses the N-word?![]()
To expunge the word from a new printing of the book might make it easier to sell to southern school boards,