Twilight (The Twilight Saga, #1) Twilight discussion


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Grammatical Errors

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message 351: by Anna (new) - rated it 5 stars

Anna this entire geektastic conversation is being bandied about on LJ; y'all are about to be immortalized.


message 352: by Gerd (last edited Jul 24, 2012 03:42AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Gerd William wrote: "Now my turn to be "picky." "She followed" is elliptical and the object is understood, as in the comparative "My sister is taller [I am]," or an imperative sentence when the subject in understood."

Ahm, sorry, but if you say "My sister is taller", it does not automatically include a "than I am", and therefore it would be bad style to use it.
Taller needs a comparative or it says nothing.

Which is the main point about grammar, it's most of the time preferrable to use a sentence that can be understood on its own.


message 353: by William (new)

William Gerd wrote: "William wrote: "Now my turn to be "picky." "She followed" is elliptical and the object is understood, as in the comparative "My sister is taller [I am]," or an imperative sentence when the subject ..."

Okay, try this: I am tall, but my sister is taller [than I am]. Sorry but I didn't think I'd have to fill in the gap. Also: When [I was] going to the store, I wrecked my car. Both elliptical.


message 354: by Gerd (new) - rated it 4 stars

Gerd Well, when you used "She followed" as base and then gave "My sister is taller" as an further example, I naturally assumed that you meant it as a complete sentence. :D


message 355: by William (last edited Jul 24, 2012 07:21AM) (new)

William "I'll lead. You can follow." Both objects are dropped. But it was my mistake for inadvertently leaving out the "than" in my original message, so it is really my error. Sorry ;) Oh, and yeah, many times we leave out the "that" in clauses and the "to" in infinitives. What a mess, but it is often worse in other languages.


message 356: by Gerd (new) - rated it 4 stars

Gerd I noticed that the English like to drop the parts of a sentence that can be easily infered (though, I feel American authors are more prone to do this), I think that's part of what makes the beauty of the language.

German, for example, is to rigid to do that.


message 357: by Will (new) - rated it 1 star

Will IV Natalie wrote: "Let me know what you thought about it! :)"

I'll be honest. While the article was well written, I disagreed with a lot of it's content and thought a lot of the analyses were lazy. That being said, I liked the writing and the descriptions a lot.


message 358: by Natalie (new) - added it

Natalie Will wrote: "Natalie wrote: "Let me know what you thought about it! :)"

I'll be honest. While the article was well written, I disagreed with a lot of it's content and thought a lot of the analyses were lazy. T..."


It's his writing and description that I love the most. 9/11 art is hard to handle aesthetically and mentally. Perhaps I also enjoyed it because it tied-in well with Falling Man


message 359: by Natalie (new) - added it

Natalie sorry for going off topic again..


message 360: by Will (last edited Jul 27, 2012 04:40PM) (new) - rated it 1 star

Will IV I'm intrigued enough to move his book White Noise up on my list to get it sooner rather than later as I did enjoy his prose.


message 361: by Kirby (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kirby Marisella wrote: "this entire geektastic conversation is being bandied about on LJ; y'all are about to be immortalized."

what is LJ?


message 362: by Will (new) - rated it 1 star

Will IV LiveJournal?


Savannah The book was written in first person... Maybe she was in character as she wrote the book. We all know Bella wasn't that bright...


message 364: by Natalie (new) - added it

Natalie Sky wrote: "The book was written in first person... Maybe she was in character as she wrote the book. We all know Bella wasn't that bright..."

I agree.

We're listening in on Bellas mind, who we know is conflicted and fragmented; it is only natural for the text to have the same flavor.


Flora Hmm... I am rather perplexed. When I read the book, I... I didn't really notice the grammar. Might be my mistakes and carelessness. But still, it's really... boring and rather bland. I got bored in the midst of reading the book.


message 366: by [deleted user] (new)

Okay, I'm not a fan of Twilight but I have read the books. In fact, I found her way of writing and her GRAMMAR perfect, it was my favourite part of the book, since I couldn't enjoy the characters or the story that I'd promised my friend I'd read. But I think she has a beautiful style of writing, I learned so many words to extend my vocabulary from those books! I've got nothing against her grammar, she has a way with words. And that's not a hugely common gift.
})i({


message 367: by Joseph (new)

Joseph Kan Kristen wrote: "Jessica wrote: "Instead of arguing over bad grammar, why doesn't somebody give an example from the book?"

Seriously.
Or several, since supposedly they're everywhere."


A good example is around page 100 or so im not sure where Bella supposedly changes in the changing room but Myers writes "I drifted to the changing room CHANGING in a trance like state." so Bella started changing while going to the changing room? Weird. Also it says something like "I went into the gym lightheaded and wobbly" Misplaced modifier right there


Rel8tivity This isn't exactly a grammatical error, more of an editorial one, but it's one of my favorites:

On page 39 of a hardback copy of BD, chapter 3. It's the morning of the wedding. Bella gets up and makes pancakes for Charlie, but she's too keyed up to eat. What happens a few lines down?

He scowled into his cereal bowl and muttered the words "monkey suit" under his breath.

Why's Charlie eating his pancakes in a cereal bowl? Unless he enjoys topping his cereal with pancakes, this is an editorial error.


message 369: by Sunny (last edited May 20, 2015 09:03PM) (new)

Sunny Zhou One of my favorite screw-ups from Twilight is this quote about Edward staring at Bella with the gaze of a destroying angel

destroying angel = mushroom

EDWARD WAS STARING AT BELLA LIKE A MUSHROOM. niiiiiice

Meyer's editor should hang their head in shame. If I had a dollar for every discrepancy, inconsistency, and plot hole in this book I would be $$$$ing rich.


message 370: by Sunny (new)

Sunny Zhou Then again, I guess Meyer could be referencing the Biblical destroying angel.

Still kinda funny when I think of Edward staring at Bella like a mushroom. When I first think of "destroying angel", I think of the poisonous mushroom


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