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Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 1:53 pm
by CalStateTempe
Sneaked or snuck?

Its the big debate raging in the household.

Previous battles include the proper use of is vs. are; it's vs its; in complex sentence structure.

Stolen vs stole vs stoled was an epic one that I lost, I may have or have not been under the influence when debating that one. :lol:

Re: Grammer Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 2:24 pm
by gumby
It's
Sneaked
Grammar

Re: Grammer Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 2:43 pm
by UAdevil
Lit vs lighted

Re: Grammer Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 4:19 pm
by Longhorned
I couldn't convince someone recently that "seen" isn't the simple past tense of "to see." When I tried explain that it's a past participle, I got kicked off the stoop. So we're left with:

"I walked into the liquor store and I seen this girl."

I'm still favoring the push present progressive.

Re: Grammer Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 5:01 pm
by Merkin
A hanged man is not a hung man.

Image

Image

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 6:23 pm
by CalStateTempe
boughten vs bought?

http://grammarist.com/usage/boughten/

Not a grammar conundrum but a pronunciation one.

jaguar is said:

1) ja-gwarr
or
2) jag-wire

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 6:37 pm
by UAEebs86
CalStateTempe wrote:boughten vs bought?

http://grammarist.com/usage/boughten/

Not a grammar conundrum but a pronunciation one.

jaguar is said:

1) ja-gwarr
or
2) jag-wire
On the car commercials the British guy says jag-u-are.

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 7:03 pm
by ASUHATER!
Jaguar pronunciation is supposed to be jag u ar

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 7:45 pm
by Katzenfreund
.

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Sat May 02, 2015 8:44 pm
by azgreg
Image

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Sun May 03, 2015 7:42 am
by ghostwhitehorse

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Sun May 03, 2015 8:34 am
by Puerco
Thats funny , Greg.

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Mon May 04, 2015 10:08 am
by gumby
"How are you guyses dinners?" Vs. "How are your dinners?"

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Mon May 04, 2015 10:28 am
by pokinmik
Not a grammar conundrum per se but I can't stand when the talking heads pluralize a name. "He really needs to turn it on if he wants to be recognized along side the Michael Jordan's and Magic Johnson's of the world." It's an epidemic nowadays all over TV/radio.

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Mon May 04, 2015 10:45 am
by gumby
^^^

Those apostrophes. Not needed.

On the flip side, is the singular for fan bases.

"Wildcat fan is going crazy."

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Mon May 04, 2015 10:49 am
by Longhorned
gumby wrote:"How are you guyses dinners?" Vs. "How are your dinners?"
It gets more worser. "How are your guys's dinners?" Try to untie the logic of that one.
pokinmik wrote:Not a grammar conundrum per se but I can't stand when the talking heads pluralize a name. "He really needs to turn it on if he wants to be recognized along side the Michael Jordan's and Magic Johnson's of the world." It's an epidemic nowadays all over TV/radio.
It wasn't a grammatical issue until you made it one by misusing possessive forms! :D

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Mon May 04, 2015 10:53 am
by azgreg
Is it Ok to start a sentence with a number? Example: 5 instead of Five.

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Mon May 04, 2015 11:00 am
by Longhorned
azgreg wrote:Is it Ok to start a sentence with a number? Example: 5 instead of Five.
Editorial miscellany usually include the requirement of spelling out single-digits numbers anywhere in a sentence. Some venues require it for double-digit numbers as well.

But no matter what anybody says, there's nothing wrong with starting a sentence with a number. Unless it's your copy editor who says so.

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Mon May 04, 2015 11:27 am
by gumby
azgreg wrote:Is it Ok to start a sentence with a number? Example: 5 instead of Five.
That's a style matter. At newspapers, it's "Five." Reason for the rule is so everyone does the same thing. Not a matter of right or wrong.
It's also why you'll see: "Some 1.5 milion people" or "A total of $1.5 million" rather than: "One million, five hundred thousand people" ...

In the body, single digits spelled out (one, two, three). Higher than nine, use the numeral.

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Mon May 04, 2015 4:38 pm
by 77HoyaCat4Ever
gumby wrote:"How are you guyses dinners?" Vs. "How are your dinners?"
You mean how is all y'alls dinners?

Re: Grammar Conundrums

Posted: Tue May 05, 2015 8:02 am
by gumby
You guyses in the NW. We don't allow Southerners.