Because I am bored and counting down the hours until I am officially on vacation...
What is the one word that drives you crazy when people us it wrong?
Mine is conversate. Conversate is NOT a word. The proper word is converse.
I have many but that one bothers me the most.
What is yours?
Re: Non-clicky grammar poll
When people use "impact" as anything other than a noun.
You don't impact something, you affect something. It is just so accepted as to be rampant now, especially on the news....and it makes me cringe every. single. time.
I have two.
1) rEdiculous is not correct. It is r-i-diculous!!
2) If you shorten 'until' do not write 'tell'
nook-you-lar
Ugh.
When people use "effect" and "affect" interchangeably. They are 2 totally different words!
Same goes for "advice" and "advise". Annoys the hell out of me.
Hmmm...I have lots! But if I were to pick just one it would be....
You're vs Your
My dad "warshes" things.
I warshed the car today.
I put your jeans in the warsh.
When people use "ignorant" as in to say obnoxious. It means without knowledge. Can't stand it.
I have a friend who always says "anywheres" and "somewheres". She even writes it that way in emails. She HAS to know it's wrong. I'm wondering if she thinks it sounds cute?
I also hate "seen" as in "oh, I seen that guy the other day". The worst!
This x10,000
Flustrated.
Libary instead of library (you should be shot, seriously).
Or on the tri boards when people would say "dialate" instead of "dilate."
It's DILATE people! Like when they dilate your eyes!
this x 1000000.
And, "the copier needs fixed". No. It's "the copier needs to be fixed".
I agree with all of these.
Get off the car. Get down from the car. It's get out of the car.
Turn off the candle. It's blow the candle out.
Samwich instead of sandwich.
This is mine as well!
When people get on line instead of in line. It's let's go get in line at the register, not on line. I think this is a New Jersey thing.
And I'm not going to do that no more. It's anymore!
Ask pronounced "aks"
Anything that ends in "th" that is prounounced "f" (ex. breath becomes breaf)
When people use "seen" when they should use "saw" (ex. I seen a bird outside. AHHHHH!)
Huh? People say that and mean it (as in, it wasn't just a slip-up)?
I hate when people confuse farther/further and fewer/less.
I think that might be a geographic thing. Because up here, I've rarely ever heard anyone say it as two syllables.
I'll start off with a confession. Despite a graduate degree and having looked it up many times, I still don't feel ever remember how to correctly use affect/effect. So, I will write these long, complicated sentences to avoid it. But at least I know what I don't know.
My peeves:
Improper use of quotation marks for emphasis, ie. "fresh" fish.
Ending a sentence with a preposition (although, if I'm being lazy I do this, but I feel bad about it).
People saying they don't believe in something when they mean that they don't agree with it. Like "I don't believe in alternative medicine." There's nothing to believe in, things like accupuncture exist. You may not think they work as well as traditional medicine, but they are real. That's a goofy example, but it comes up ALL the time.
I'm with you, sister. This one drives me batty.
I agree. I think it is a regional thing, but you made curious. I went on google hunt and found this on the National Association of Realtors website:
Irrespective of local dialect and custom, the term REALTOR? has but one pronunciation:
Members are encouraged to carefully train new employees and salespeople, particularly receptionists, on the proper pronunciation of the term REALTOR?. Consistent aural use is just as important as consistent visual use to the preservation of the distinctive and recognizable character of the MARKS. Teach employees and salespeople to avoid uses such as:
"Good morning! John Doe, REAL-A-TORS." or
"Good morning! John Doe, REAL-I-TORS." or
"Good morning! John Doe, RE-LA-TERS." or
"Good morning! John Doe, RE-AL-TORS."
Using a comma before an s to make something plural. Such as:
"Banana's on sale!"
Do the bananas own the sale?
I see this on signs all the time, and I am always soooo tempted to go into the shop and ask how the bananas came to own the sale.
Your and you're
There, they're, and their
Loose and lose
Using text "spelling" when writing something other than a text message.