MovieChat Forums > General Discussion > Bad grammar that bugs you?

Bad grammar that bugs you?


I just heard an example. “I was bit by the shark.” You can say “It bit me” but it should be “I was bitten.”

“I done it yesterday” instead of “I did it.”

And the word pet replacing pat. You Pat a dog, how can you pet it? It sounds like you’re making it a pet.

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When people say nucular instead of nuclear. I think one of the Bush presidents said this.
Also when people say Mos-cow instead of Mos-coh.

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I tried to find the correct Russian pronunciation but it's not even Moscow, it's Mosk-va.

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Pronunciation of foreign words is a whole different subject.

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"W".

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Noone for no one.

Who the fuck is noone? You mean the Herman's Hermits guy?

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I've seen that one. Always gives me a chuckle.

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I often see that mistake. None was originally a contraction of 'not one' and somehow lost its apostrophe over time.

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How about folks who use no punctuation whatsoever?? I skip over comments like that. I don't like having to read, and then re-read what was written to figure out what the writer was trying to say.

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How about people who write lengthy posts and don't bother to break it up into paragraphs.

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👍 Score! I skip those, too.

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So funny.. Someone called me on saying He drown or drowned in the pool and we had a funny argument over what I said. It really bugged them that I might have used the past tense blah blah blah.. Really? I still say I said it correctly. I have also been called out for supposedly saying expresso instead of espresso.

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When you think of English how the ED can either be a D sound or a T, it must be so hard for foreigners to understand changing a word to past tense with the small sound at the end, especially the D. These are unvoiced sounds (no vocal chords used) which makes it very subtle.

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When commercials blare "Save up to 50% off!" No, no, no. That's redundant. You either save 50%, or you get 50% off.

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My dad didn't like it when a commercial said something was "for free." He said it should be "free" not "for free."

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I agree with your Dad.

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How about the double use of had
"he had had enough of it"
seems like it would have to be wrong, yet it is correct in English language

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[deleted]

Alright instead of all right. You wouldn’t say alwrong! Imply vs Infer....Imply=to suggest; Infer=to take from the suggestion

“Are you implying....?” I’m inferring from your....”

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