As in, doesn’t matter at all to you.

  • markovs_gun@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Y’all is completely fine to use. It was a mistake for English to lose its distinction between second person singular and plural. Either we accept the word “y’all” or we go back to saying thou and thee, either way we can’t just keep on awkwardly dancing around not having a distinction between second person plural and singular.

  • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    My philosophy is that languages are made up to make communication easier and they change all the time anyway. So as long as you are understood, that’s more important than getting the grammar to be perfect. Getting it like 80% right is plenty and that last 20% consists of a bunch of obscure or ambiguous rules that would take up way too much of my processing power to keep track of while communicating, thus hindering the purpose of using language in the first place. Also, English is a stupid mess of a language. I don’t have enough respect for it to follow all of it’s rules.

    That said… what DOES bug me a little is people who make videos who regularly misuse words. Not because I think it’s that big of a deal, but… come on… this is your job and you have complete control over the work at every step of the way and have so many opportunities to correct mistakes. You write the script. You read it. You watch it again while doing editing and could easily re-record bits that are wrong or awkward. Although perhaps this is less about the language specifically and more about leaving mistakes and bloopers in videos in general. That’s what editing is for. We have more advanced editing tools available to the average person than ever before. USE THEM!

  • Jentu@lemmy.ml
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    16 days ago

    I will always use “who” because “whom” gives off too much of a Reddit vibe.

  • communism@lemmy.ml
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    18 days ago

    Deliberately not capitalising proper nouns as a show of disrespect (countries, people, titles, etc). Not “grammatically correct” but I think it falls under freedom of expression.

  • DivineDev@piefed.social
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    19 days ago

    In German there’s the saying “macht Sinn”, which is wrong since it’s just a direct translation of “makes sense”. Correct would be “ergibt Sinn”, in English “results in sense”, but I don’t care, “macht Sinn” rolls off the tongue easier.

  • SentientFishbowl@lemmy.ml
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    18 days ago

    Anything that is used colloquially but technically isn’t correct because some loser didn’t like it 200 years ago. To boldly keep on splitting infinitives is a rejection of language prescriptivism!

    • davidgro@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Absolutely. Anyone who has done any programming should recognize that changing what’s in the quote is corrupting the data.

      If I’m quoting a question though, then it makes sense to include the question mark in the quote.

      I laughed when Joe asked "That's the hill you chose?".  
      
  • jenesaisquoi@feddit.org
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    16 days ago

    I am not in defence of but actually annoyed by:

    Using if instead of whether. For example: “I will check if the window is open”. This means: “if the window is open, I will check”. What people mean to say is “I will check whether the window is open”.

    Also, using was in hypotheticals instead of the correct were. For example: if I were going to check whether the window was open, I wouldn’t be standing here. Not “if I was going to check […]”.

  • Meron35@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    My pet peeve is people thinking they are being clever by complaining about the supposed incorrect usage of literally as figuratively.

    People, including famous authors, have been literally (not hyperbole) using the word as an intensifier, and therefore, figuratively, since 1847, e.g. F Scott Fitzgerald, Charles Dickens, and William Thackeray.

    Did we change the definition of ‘literally’? | Merriam-Webster - https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/misuse-of-literally

  • Skua@kbin.earth
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    19 days ago

    I do not like the way that unspaced em dashes look. More generally I don’t think that having distinct em and en dashes is actually useful anyway, you can absolutely just use an en dash in either case with absolutely no loss of clarity or readability, but I do need to use em dashes for some work writing so I have a key on my keyboard for it and use it semi-regularly. Whenever I use an em dash outside of a professional context I space it. So, “he’s coming next Monday — the 6th, that is — some time in the morning,” as opposed to the more broadly-recommended, “he’s coming next Monday—the 6th, that is—some time in the morning.”

    I have absolutely no reason for this other than subjective aesthetic preferences, but it has coincidentally become somewhat useful recently. LLMs notoriously use em dashes far more than humans but consistently use them unspaced, so it’s a sort of mild defence against anything I write looking LLM-generated

    • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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      18 days ago

      oh no

      oh no I apparently feel very strongly that you’re wrong here

      You’re right that m-dashes should be spaced, of course. But there’s a big difference between an m-dash and an n-dash, and you used the wrong one in your example. An m-dash, like a semi colon or colon, is for separating two related clauses — there’s never at time when you should use two in the same sentence. Whereas n-dashes are used for parantheticals –sub-clauses that can’t stand on their own– and should, like round brackets or quotation marks, have spaces on the outside but not the inside.

    • sylver_dragon@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Dashes, of all kinds need to fucking die, die, die.
      While not completely fair, my burning hatred of dashes comes for word processing applications automatically replacing hyphens and especially double hyphens in code with dashes. And this never gets caught until said code needs to be copy-pasted back into a functional application, and it fails. Sometimes in weird and horrible ways. So, while it’s the auto-replace which causes the problem, the existence of dashes is proximate enough that they all need to be burned out of existence for all time.

  • Soapbox@lemmy.zip
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    18 days ago

    “Y’all”

    I will die on the hill that it’s more efficient and neutral than the alternatives.

    • runner_g@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      17 days ago

      “Y’all” and the plural “all y’all” are part of my daily vocabulary. And I’m in no way of southern origin.

    • gwilikers@lemmy.ml
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      17 days ago

      English has to bend over backwards to make up for the fact that it doesn’t have a natural plural 2nd person form.

      Ye Y’all Youse (Dublin)

  • agent_nycto@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Ending a sentence with a proposition is just fine. Picky people whom I’ve only seen parodies of on the Internet go “oh you ended your sentence with a preposition I have no idea what you mean by ‘He went in’ maybe you could explain what he went into? A jello mold? A ditch? What did go into?”

    You asked if he went into the store and I said he went in, you know what I meant because of CONTEXT CLUES.

    I’ve never met anyone who’s ever been this picky but I’m ready to bite them if I ever find one.

  • FiveMacs@lemmy.ca
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    19 days ago

    abbreviations. it doesn’t save any meaningful time. it only prompts questions for clarification because people don’t define the abbreviation prior to using it throughout their post. plus since everything is being abbreviated out of laziness, the same abbreviations get used for multiple things which just adds additional confusions.

      • hedgehog@ttrpg.network
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        14 days ago

        There have been so many places in front end web dev that used the abbreviation “a11y” without defining it (or explaining the 11) that for years I assumed it was just the name of a particular library that had gotten Kleenexed.

        (To be clear, I’m using “Kleenexed” as a verb here to mean “genericized explosively, as if a sneeze.”)

        It didn’t help to look at the code, either. “Okay cool, so all this does is add a bunch of random extra tags to the DOM? Doesn’t seem super useful but okay, I guess there’s probably some tool out there that depends on them but we probably don’t use it.”