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How to tell if it's passive voice
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I totally agree with you about thinking like an eighth grader. I will remember this rule.


I was planting roses by zombies makes no sense. Finally an easy way to defend the past progressive!

Newengland: Zombies are fairly fussy about what they eat. In the most liberal of documents (“movies” if you will) they eat flesh. The conservative documents state they eat brains specifically. Albeit, they eat flesh in most modern instances.

Well that too, but it's actually a lot more because it also affects reading.

Which is just one reason why it's best to turn the grammar check off. ;)

Well that too, but it's actually a lot more because it also affects reading."
Dysgraphia is the writing version of dylexia. Some people have both.I can spell anything out loud, correctly, but I have never typed the word "Thanks" it's always "thnaks". And is "nad", here is "hree". I invert b'and d's while writing by hand, and even scramble the spaces between words into the middles of them. Used to do long division with the little symbol upsdie-down. I mean ipside, I mean UPSIDE down. Phew. And I'm a writer!?

I always take advice, from computers and from others. But then, I make my own mind up.

Deer aren't terribly clever. They don't look up for one thing, which is why hunters build stands in trees (though some hunters aren't terribly clever, either).
I'm not a fan of grammar check. I'm always telling myself it was made by some techie nerd, not an English prof. Techie nerds have little patience for subtleties of language....
I'm not a fan of grammar check. I'm always telling myself it was made by some techie nerd, not an English prof. Techie nerds have little patience for subtleties of language....

Exactly. Context is all, and that's where automated things really fail.

My pet peeve is Finnish and finish. They don't capitelize other verbs so why they can't notice that mistake.
And I do think it's weird if I can notice the wrong words but native speakers can't. For some reason I have noticed more people writing 'of' instead of 'have'. ("I would of done something...") Took me a while to realize what that meant.
Tytti wrote: "For some reason I have noticed more people writing 'of' instead of 'have'. ("I would of done something...") Took me a while to realize what that meant.
"
It comes from mishearing the contraction "I would've..."
"
It comes from mishearing the contraction "I would've..."

Yes, I know, but don't they teach writing and grammar in school? That would seem pretty basic stuff.


I've often thought that becoming aware of grammatical rules comes through learning foreign languages, rather than being taught English. I certainly learned about grammar by studying Latin and German. English lessons on the topic I found rather puzzling.
Anthony D wrote: "Tytti wrote: "Ruth wrote: "but don't they teach writing and grammar in school?"
I've often thought that becoming aware of grammatical rules comes through learning foreign languages, rather than be..."
I never really learned much English grammar until I started learning a foreign language. I was a bookworm with a good seat of the pants feel for English grammar so I never paid much attention to grammar lessons.
I've often thought that becoming aware of grammatical rules comes through learning foreign languages, rather than be..."
I never really learned much English grammar until I started learning a foreign language. I was a bookworm with a good seat of the pants feel for English grammar so I never paid much attention to grammar lessons.

I have wondered that. But I started learning English about 1.5 years later I learned how to read and write, so it's difficult to say. Finnish is also so different that I don't think it would help much.
But I don't English is that difficult, at least the normal, everyday language. Of course sometimes I can tell something is wrong with the spelling but don't know what. The word just looks wrong.

Which is just one reason why it's best to turn the grammar check off. ;)"
Or, ignore. :)


I've known people in their fifties who think that you put a comma when there's a little space, a semicolon when there's a middle-size space and a period when there's a big space. Sort-of like the 3 Bears guide to punctuation. It reminded me of when I was in the third grade and we were taught that you put a comma when there's a little pause, etc.
And where do you see spaces and pauses?
My spell check is insane.
If I write:
Or something like that.
The computer changes it to:
Or something likes that.
***
What the grammar check doesn’t realize is that like is not a verb here.
(I just now found out that, when the computer checks the grammar of “Or something likes that” it advises me to change “likes” to “like.”)
And there are people who blindly follow these checks!

You'd think, after a whole lifetime of reading, writing, and speaking English, you'd know the right way to use punctuation.
Then you reach AP English and you're told that:
--dashes and commas are not interchangable (When you use a pair of dashes--like this--it's supposed to be for emphasis and not just for making a parenthetical.)
--colons can only be used to precede a list
--semicolons have a bunch of rules that no one but our teacher actually understands
And it's all too complicated. No wonder my generation is saying goodbye to traditional writing rules.
Lists are only ONE function of a colon. I hope your AP English teacher knows as much. Please, God.
As for the semicolon, he's just a period between chummy sentences, related somehow in subject matter. You can also use him in place of the comma when you have a long list which ITSELF includes commas:
I like running and swimming; picnics, fireworks, and apple pie; and finally a good night's rest on the Fourth of July.
As for the semicolon, he's just a period between chummy sentences, related somehow in subject matter. You can also use him in place of the comma when you have a long list which ITSELF includes commas:
I like running and swimming; picnics, fireworks, and apple pie; and finally a good night's rest on the Fourth of July.

She was killed [by zombies.]” <—- Makes sense? Yes. It's passive voice.
“Zombies killed [by zombies] her.” <—- Makes sense? ..."
Speaking of not teaching grammar on the college level, why not simply explain what active and passive voice mean? I think the people here are capable of understanding it.
An active voice sentence is one in which the subject performs the action.
Ruth wrote the message.
"wrote" is the verb.
"Ruth" is the subject.
Ruth did the writing--active voice.
A passive voice sentence is one in which the subject is acted upon.
The message was written.
"was written" is the verb.
"The message" is the subject.
The message is what is being written--passive voice.
Sure, adding "by zombies" helps you to see whether it's active or passive voice, even if you're only eight years old. But we're adults and I think it would help in the long run if people actually understood the concepts.

You'd think, after a whole lifetime of reading, writing, and speaking English, you'd know the right way to use punctuation.
Then you reach AP English and y..."
I don't think grammar rules are insane. The problem comes from not realizing that grammar isn't intended to make sense. It's just intended as a guide to how educated native speakers use their language with the implied suggestion that, if you want to make people think you've got an education, you should use the language that way, too.
People wrote first and then the linguists came along and made rules based on that.
By the way, this -- is a pair of hyphens, not a pair of dashes. The long one, which I can't find on my computer right now (My computer changes the position of things on the keyboard every once in a while. No, I'm not crazy. My computer is a cheap piece of junk.), back in the olden days when people used typewriters, was indicated by two hyphens.
Single hyphens are used to "attach" meanings. For example 10-year-old boy tells us that the boy is 10 years old, that is, it's one adjective made up of three words.
She was killed [by zombies.]” <—- Makes sense? Yes. It's passive voice.
“Zombies killed [by zombies] her.” <—- Makes sense? No. It's active voice.