Language & Grammar discussion

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Grammar Central > Ask Our Grammar "Experts"

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message 1001: by M (new)

M | 113 comments It looks as though the barometric pressure in that teacup may be pretty low, judging from the tempest that seems to be in progress.


message 1002: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments G N wrote:
Now if I had some space in the teacup I could invite you to a simply scrumptious breakfast. Complete with croissant, eggs be..."


Ahhhhhh, a croissant after my own heart! Thank You!
I breakfasted on Italian Focaccia, Greek Yogurt, wild Maine Blueberries and Bananas. Ever since the bikini fiasco, I feel the need... :-)

If you are going to be entertaining....I think you're going to need a bigger boat!(teacup) :-D


message 1003: by Scribble (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 631 comments Yes, and the problem with entertaining is that I have to invest in some decent china and silverware, as well. I'm sure M mentioned owning a collection...you don't suppose he'd consider parting with it?

That breakfast sounds like a delightful way to start your day. How are the renovations progressing?


message 1004: by M (new)

M | 113 comments When did I mention that?


message 1005: by Scribble (last edited Nov 15, 2010 10:19AM) (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 631 comments Something about a cat? Or was it a squirrel? As for our mutual acqaintance who laments a particular lack, perhaps you'd adjust the pronoun in your question to 'our friend', please? Otherwise we might have more than barometric pressure lows about which to concern ourselves :D


message 1006: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
Is this the "Ask Our Grammar Experts" thread? Looks like grammatical chat to me. Take it to the kitchen, people!


message 1007: by Andrez (new)

Andrez (andrez-ssi) talking about Grammar questions, do you say "it is me" or "it is I",because though I usually hear the first, I've seen the latter somewhere too. If both are correct, then in which cases are they used?


message 1008: by Andrez (new)

Andrez (andrez-ssi) Kitty wrote: " I can imagine the confusion English is to any one trying to learn it. "

it is quite confusing in the beginning, but once it's understood it's quite easy ;)


message 1009: by Scribble (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 631 comments (sneaks back into the room from the Kitchen...looks around. All is quiet in the auditorium except for a lone Stray...)

Ha. While no-one's here to argue the toss....they'll be along, soon enough...

Let's look at the components of the sentence according to which parts of speech are being represented.

Go on, Stray. Off you go. You speak about 5 different languages and have had to study grammar. What are the parts of speech in this sentence?


message 1010: by Andrez (new)

Andrez (andrez-ssi) grammar's a sneaky little fellow ;P

Give me a sentece, GN


message 1011: by M (last edited Nov 15, 2010 02:05PM) (new)

M | 113 comments It's me is the only natural way to say it in English. It's I is grammatically correct but so stilted that it should never be used by a native speaker who has character and self confidence. If you aren't confident enough to be natural in a formal situation, or find yourself around others who suffer hypercorrectness and can't be natural, either, don't shock everyone by saying, "It's me." The planet, in embarrassment, might stop turning. Find some easy way to avoid artificiality without being unnatural: "Is that you?" "It is." When you're in the company of people who have no pretenses, "It's me" is perfectly all right. After all, you wouldn't say, "It's they or we." You'd say, "It's them or us." (At least, you should.)


message 1012: by Scribble (last edited Nov 15, 2010 02:00PM) (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 631 comments It is I!
Said the fly
and flitted up, looped around
buzzed down to the ground
before 'splat'
take that!
It's me,
stomped he.


message 1013: by M (new)

M | 113 comments I had a feeling you'd show up if I posted something like that. I can't explain why I had that feeling. Call it ESP.

A wonderful response, by the way (as usual).


message 1014: by Andrez (new)

Andrez (andrez-ssi) M wrote: "It's me is the only natural way to say it in English. It's I is grammatically correct but so stilted that it should never be used by a native speaker who has character and self confidence. If you a..."

thank you :)


message 1015: by M (last edited Nov 15, 2010 02:21PM) (new)

M | 113 comments Oh, no! Thank you, but, Stray, you're not supposed to thank me or do as I do. That will lead you nowhere but trouble. Hypercorrectness is in and good English is out. Especially, don't use the verb get. I was bored and trying to start a conflagration.

GN, set her straight.


message 1016: by Scribble (last edited Nov 15, 2010 02:22PM) (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 631 comments A bonfire of the vanities?

Stray, on behalf of M (he's chasing a fly that refuses to die), let me accept your grateful thanks for having received egalitarian instruction in the vagaries of English from one of our esteemed grammar equestrians.


message 1017: by Andrez (new)

Andrez (andrez-ssi) I'm a perfectionist, I want to be grammatically correct. Besides, my friends have learned to ignore my remarks every time I correct them, in Portuguese or English.


message 1018: by M (new)

M | 113 comments I've never ridden a horse in my life.


message 1019: by Scribble (last edited Nov 15, 2010 02:24PM) (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 631 comments Don't tell that to Jan! You're her knight in shining armour braving dragons, boldy resplendent and shining example of managing miscreants.


message 1020: by M (new)

M | 113 comments I mean in my other life, the one in which I'm supposed to be doing laundry. I'd better go.


message 1021: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 16546 comments Mod
To the Kitchen wit' ya!


message 1022: by Jana (new)

Jana Day after tomorrow "is" my final or "are" my finals?
Which one is correct? I can always say "I have finals day after tomorrow." or " My finals are day after tomorrow." But that would be too easy.


message 1023: by Debbie, sardonic princess of cheerfulness (new)

Debbie (sardonicprincessofcheerfulness) | 6389 comments Mod
The day after tomorrow I am sitting my finals?

And easy can be good.....No need to make it harder than it need be!!


message 1024: by Carol (last edited Nov 15, 2010 07:18PM) (new)

Carol | 10410 comments Is it one final or two , if it is one it would be The day after tomorrow is my final.

"I have finals day after tomorrow."
This should be : I have finals the day after tomorrow.


message 1025: by Jana (last edited Nov 15, 2010 07:23PM) (new)

Jana Kitty wrote: "Is it one final or two , if it is one it would be The day after tomorrow is my final.

"I have finals day after tomorrow."
This should be : I have finals the day after tomorrow."


THE
A
AN

Thank you! You see I always put them where they don't belong and never where they do.
We just don't have them in my language.
And it is just one final. :)


message 1026: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 16546 comments Mod
Finals day is tomorrow.


message 1027: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments I see , so you can say finals in that context. No wonder English is so confusing.


message 1028: by M (last edited Nov 16, 2010 03:58AM) (new)

M | 113 comments Jana, the actual sentence is My finals are day after tomorrow. Inverted, it would be Day after tomorrow are my finals. It's idiomatic to say it the first way but not the second, which is why the second sounds peculiar. In this sentence the verb means the equivalent of take place or occur, verbs that are intransitive but not linking, so the phrase day after tomorrow functions adverbially rather than as a subject complement.

I mentioned this to my boss (my wife), who said I had given the wrong response. The right response is: If your exams are day after tomorrow, why are you here instead of studying?


message 1029: by Scribble (last edited Nov 16, 2010 04:33AM) (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 631 comments The finals are (or occur or will take place) the day after tomorrow.


message 1030: by M (last edited Nov 16, 2010 04:44AM) (new)

M | 113 comments Then why are you here instead of studying? As far as the definite article goes, I used the example Jana gave. The finals are day after tomorrow is a better sentence than The finals are the day after tomorrow. It's shorter, just as idiomatic, and says exactly the same thing.


message 1031: by Scribble (last edited Nov 16, 2010 04:50AM) (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 631 comments M wrote: "The finals are day after tomorrow is a better sentence than The finals are the day after after tomorrow. It's shorter, more idiomatic and says exactly the same thing."

ROFL
it's shorter, more idiomatic, and says something.


message 1032: by M (last edited Nov 16, 2010 07:33AM) (new)

M | 113 comments Oh, sorry! I revised my post. It isn't more idiomatic, merely as idiomatic.


message 1033: by Jan (new)

Jan (auntyjan) | 1259 comments Definitely needs the definite article, the day after tomorrow...and if we keep discussing it much longer she will be able to simply say: My final is tomorrow. See you later!


message 1034: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 16546 comments Mod
Beg to differ. The idiomatic phrase drops the article. I'm going to start sending out poems day after tomorrow.


message 1035: by M (new)

M | 113 comments Thank you, Ruth!


message 1036: by Andrez (new)

Andrez (andrez-ssi) so... "Ain't" and "Gonna" and "Wanna" and all of those words...what are they, grammatically?


message 1037: by Debbie, sardonic princess of cheerfulness (new)

Debbie (sardonicprincessofcheerfulness) | 6389 comments Mod
Contractions....


message 1038: by M (new)

M | 113 comments Does that mean she's pregnant with a novel?


message 1039: by Debbie, sardonic princess of cheerfulness (new)

Debbie (sardonicprincessofcheerfulness) | 6389 comments Mod
Trust you...(shakes head)


message 1040: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 16546 comments Mod
You ain't gonna find wanna in any formal writing, Stray. Ain't qualifies as a contraction, but has fallen into bad repute.

Gonna and wanna are merely transliterations of the slurred spoken words "going to" and "want to."


message 1041: by Andrez (new)

Andrez (andrez-ssi) ok thanks. I don't use them anyway so... *shruggs*
I just wanted to know


message 1042: by Jana (new)

Jana Thank you. Now I'm even more confused. I have a long way to go with this.


message 1043: by Jan (new)

Jan (auntyjan) | 1259 comments In most languages, there is a difference between how the language is spoken, which can sometimes be informal, and how it is written, which is usually more formal. Will not becomes won't and do not becomes don't. These contractions are perfectly acceptable in all forms of English...written, spoken, formal, informal. Now, sometimes in spoken English various ways of speaking appear which are not generally accepted in written English, even though they may be widely used in speech. "gonna" and "wanna" fall into this category. You will hear people say "I'm gonna see that movie next week." or "I wanna see it too." But they would only write it that way if a)they were in a casual chat forum like this where they might do it for fun
b)in a novel if they were trying to capture a conversation, in which case they would use speech indicators, such as inverted commas. Does that help at all, Jana?


message 1044: by Jana (last edited Nov 19, 2010 08:18PM) (new)

Jana Yes it does. It use to give me hard time. I learn English by listening to a conversations and when I started to write I had problem because of what you mention above and the fact that I sometime didn't hear things like the, a, an or I found out later on that something was made of 2 words and not an one word the way I heard it spoken. The other problem is that by learning English by listening to other people I picked up bad grammar and was not aware of it for many years. Now I'm trying to correct that and it is not so easy to re-wire the brain and re-learn everything again the correct way.


message 1045: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments Jana I am a native English speaker and I have trouble with the same things you do.


message 1046: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 16546 comments Mod
My husband, who is not a native English speaker, is convinced there is only one American vowel, the schwa.


message 1047: by Jan (new)

Jan (auntyjan) | 1259 comments He'd be completely at home in New Zealand!

Jana, I am so impressed! I didn't even realise that you hadn't grown up in an English speaking household. Can I recommend doing a lot of reading? It really helps with getting the 'feel' for English. Try reading some passages aloud, as well. If you don't mind telling us, what was your background?


message 1048: by Jana (last edited Nov 20, 2010 12:41PM) (new)

Jana My backround is Slovak or back then it was Czechoslovakia. I do read a lot, between 20-50 books a year and I challenge myself by picking books that are more difficult than the ones I read. I started with Daniella Steel and her simple language help me start reading more and understand more. And then I moved from her to a more complex books. Now even the 18 century classics are easier for me to read. But I am still too far away to read and comprehand real classics (Homer....) or even Pynthon who is contemporary. And philosophy, forget it, which is why I have sometime hard time to figure out what M and GN say when they get too philosophical about things.


message 1049: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
Oh, those damn philosophical letters! I'm glad the "common people" (I guess I'm in that group) are more understandable, Jana!


message 1050: by Jana (new)

Jana Newengland wrote: "Oh, those damn philosophical letters! I'm glad the "common people" (I guess I'm in that group) are more understandable, Jana!"

you are safe NE ;) straight-forward I get, philosophical or the underline meanning not so much.


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