HAHA. EQ! Sorry I'm just now seeing this and can't sufficiently play. But I think I can pedant [< verbing there] in a nutshell. And I update my avatar in your honor, sir.
luna_virgo wrote:Hot wax should be poured on skin (if you're into that sort of thing), not in underpants. Fire ants should have insecticide poured on them.
Agreed on the second, though on the first I believe skin is implied* to be inside the underpants.
[*Not "inferred." "Disinterested" is inherently ambiguous; people have a common understanding of the prefix and attempt to apply it logically, only to be thwarted by its multiple meanings. English is a messy language. "Imply" and "infer," on the other hand, are two distinct words. I've never quite gotten how those could get mixed up, but in verbal speech it is easy to pull out the wrong one quickly.]
moonstone wrote:If you must put bitey/stingy type things down your drawers (and who am I to judge a person on their hobbies and pastimes?) then maybe a few scorpions would be a better choice.
Scorpions would indeed provide more bang for their buck.
Do you think a stinging fish of some kind would be too floppy for the purpose?
smudge wrote:1481?! They were still burning witches in my neighborhood back then. I'm not taking no language advice from witch-immolators (is that a word?).
Or the invention of standardized spelling. History: good; stagnation: bad; grasping at straws: silly.
Fuck, those witch-immolators sure did have some choice swear words, though.
GinaSuperCat wrote:I cannot help but think of this, from the inimitable Stephen Fry...I think grammar is of utmost importance, but I also just LOVE this so much:
(it takes up the "10 items of less" issue and much more...well worth the 6 and a half minutes)...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... 7E-aoXLZGY
^Yep, this. (Love that video.) Context, convention, and circumstance. And caring. And oftentimes clarity, despite Fry's protestations, as life and language are rife with ambiguity and confusion, and it is your responsibility as a speaker/writer to help your audience understand you, not the other way around. Susan and I and others edit professionally, so when, say,
Strange Things Happen is published with a lot of obvious typos, it's galling and not just a little professionally insulting. That's not a question of love of language but of editorial cheapness/laziness. A surgeon may lose track of a piece of gauze now and then, but he/she should still leave you with the least ugly scar possible.
But we also run by different standards/styles, have different pet peeves and different places in the sand where we draw our linguistic lines. For me: nonprofessional confusion of "its" and "it's" I get as it is indeed a stupid, confusing distinction; swapping "infer" and "imply," however, just doesn't have an excuse to me. But, as is in evidence, I don't bother setting off my indeeds with commas in informal communications; I'm not sure I could get through a day without verbing a noun; and, no matter how formal the text may be, sometimes moving a preposition out from the end makes a sentence just plain hard to read. Language is a lovely, living thing whose ambiguity and multiple meanings are what make poetry and drama and art and ideas. We just all have to start somewhere.
That being said, the idea of caring, I think, gets too easily lost in Fry's comments. As is -- to add another C -- courtesy. Apathy is not experimentation, nor is conversation masturbation. You have every prerogative to not give enough of a crap to bother trying to make yourself understood. And I, in turn, have every prerogative to not give enough of a crap to bother trying to understand you. But conversation works a whole lot better when we both make an effort.
ETA: Thanks, EQ. That was fun. I missed my train, but fun!
And thanks for the heads-up, luddite lady.
Dramatic highlights & a unique musical cosmos. Guaranteed.