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« 1 2 (3) 4 »

Re: English Spelling and Usage
#21
Home away from home
Home away from home

West Peterson
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I see "marquee" used to identify a car maker waaay to often to blame it on a simple keyboard strike mistake.

To take this thread one step further, grammar has taken a real nose dive as well. Everyone and their brother seems to want to end sentences with prepositions, especially those in advertising....
"Come on down to Ricky Buck's Used Car Lot. We have hundreds of cars to choose from."

Posted on: 2014/2/10 17:16
West Peterson
1930 Packard Speedster Eight Runabout (boattail)
1940 Packard 1808 w/Factory Air
1947 Chrysler Town and Country sedan
1970 Camaro RS

https://packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=4307&forum=10

http://aaca.org/
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#22
Home away from home
Home away from home

Tim Cole
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German cars are rust buckets. When I was a kid I used to fall for the crap in Road and Track too and thought BMW's and Saabs were something fantastic. As I got older I realized those magazines are full of non-sense. Today they are stupider than ever. Some people don't learn anything and still fall for that crap.

As regards punctuation titling a book on the subject with poor usage is like starting a book on humor with a lousy joke.

Posted on: 2014/2/10 18:05
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#23
Forum Ambassador
Forum Ambassador

Dave Kenney
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West, Winston Churchill may or may not have said this about sentences ending In a proposition;
"This is the sort of bloody nonsense up with which I will not put."

Tim, I will agree German cars used to be rust buckets but oh what fun they were to drive while they still had floors!

Posted on: 2014/2/10 19:17
______________________________________________
Dave
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#24
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Forum Ambassador

Ozstatman
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More likely Yoda that would have said.

Posted on: 2014/2/10 20:56
Mal
/o[]o\
====

Bowral, Southern Highlands of NSW, Australia
"Out of chaos comes order" - Nietzsche.

1938 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD

1941 One-Twenty Club Coupe - SOLD

1948 Super Eight Limo, chassis RHD - SOLD

1950 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD

What's this?
Put your Packard in the Packard Vehicle Registry!
Here's how!
Any questions - PM or email me at ozstatman@gmail.com
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#25
Home away from home
Home away from home

Mark Graber
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In a former life I edited technical writing. I just have one wish. I wish auto enthusiasts would stop modifying the word "unique", as in "this car is very unique". Drives me nuts every time I hear it.
There, I feel better now....

Posted on: 2014/2/11 1:05
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#26
Home away from home
Home away from home

Chad G
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In my line of work (IT Systems Engineer) I receive a lot of email. Some folks write very nicely composed business appropriate email; others write email as if they are texting.

Every once in a while I have a hard time understanding what the an email is regarding, it is so poorly composed. Grammar and punctuation are invaluable for communicating well.

This is an actual email that I received; copied and pasted without modification:

"My printer is tripping..

It is printing blank pages. I just recently change the cartilage."

CG

Attach file:



jpg  (20.86 KB)
36035_52fa36695a9b7.jpg 420X294 px

Posted on: 2014/2/11 9:48
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#27
Home away from home
Home away from home

bkazmer
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In a former life I edited technical writing. I just have one wish. I wish auto enthusiasts would stop modifying the word "unique", as in "this car is very unique". Drives me nuts every time I hear it.
There, I feel better now....

Amen. No modification of a superlative.

Also the difference between "uninterested" and "disinterested."

Posted on: 2014/2/11 12:45
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#28
Home away from home
Home away from home

Ken Sadler
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I've instilled in my children the importance of spelling these three words correctly;

there
their
they're

Good English one step at a time.

Posted on: 2014/2/11 15:07
1930 Deluxe 8 745 Dual Cowl Sport Phaeton
See me in the Registry
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#29
Just can't stay away
Just can't stay away

markinroseburg
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Punctuation too.....

"Let's eat Grandma"

or

"Let's eat, Grandma!"

Posted on: 2014/2/11 16:53
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Re: English Spelling and Usage
#30
Just can't stay away
Just can't stay away

George40
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Three other things that drive me nuts:

1) "irregardless" instead of the correct "regardless"

2) "between you and I" instead of the correct "between you and me"

3) I feel "badly" (improper adverb) instead of I feel "bad" (proper use of adjective)


I feel better already!

Posted on: 2014/2/11 19:42
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