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Simple English people.

Scotsman said:
HERE is in reference to your current location.

HEAR is in reference to sound.

Stop fucking saying you have to here this music!!!

Also QUIET and QUITE are two separate words.

Cheers,
Scotsman
LOL, getting a little testy are we?
I have to stop myself whenever I say people doing things like that. My boss does & it drives me crazy!
 
Scotsman said:
HERE is in reference to your current location.

HEAR is in reference to sound.

Stop fucking saying you have to here this music!!!

Also QUIET and QUITE are two separate words.

Cheers,
Scotsman

SHUP, zionist, infidel, geo, rock cawk.
 
One that bothers me is alot it is a (space) lot, but me giving english lessons is almost as bad as need2 :worried:
 
Last edited:
what about their, they're, there
then, than (not sure why this one is even an issue with people)
its, it's
but yeah your and you're seems to always trip people up

I'm a stickler about these things, but Ive learned over time not to hold others to my own standards (even though these are the English language standards) especially on the internet.
 
Smurfy said:
what about their, they're, there
then, than (not sure why this one is even an issue with people)
its, it's
but yeah your and you're seems to always trip people up

I'm a stickler about these things, but Ive learned over time not to hold others to my own standards (even though these are the English language standards) especially on the internet.

agreed

y'all can't type for shit
 
you're considered to have an advanced mastery of the English language if you can use the following words properly:

stationary, stationery
Principal, principle
whose, who's
loose, lose
choose, chose
breathe, breath
clothe, cloth
 
Smurfy said:
you're considered to have an advanced mastery of the English language if you can use the following words properly:

stationary, stationery
Principal, principle
whose, who's
loose, lose
choose, chose
breathe, breath
clothe, cloth
for,four (is there a fore?)
bath, bathe,
loose,lose


Those are some more that get mixed up easily
 
gram, graham



wow thanks a lot now I will be returning to this thread through out the day with words that are alike but spelled differently!
 
Smurfy said:
you're considered to have an advanced mastery of the English language if you can use the following words properly:

stationary, stationery
Principal, principle
whose, who's
loose, lose
choose, chose
breathe, breath
clothe, cloth

Jesus, you're kidding.

I mean heysous, you're kidding.
 
Smurfy said:
I wish I was. :worried: I have found that even people with avg to above avg intelligence make mistakes with proper word usage.

:heart:

look at the last post in Friskie's "perfume" thread... this drives me crazy!!!
 
Smurfy said:
I wish I was. :worried: I have found that even people with avg to above avg intelligence make mistakes with proper word usage.


I remember a study in J school about mistakes made on a comp screen compared to hard copy.
The difference was about 20% something with the way the brain interprets the screen. One reason the the paper's editor made s print everything for editing.

But damn your examples are grade-school level.
 
pintoca said:
agreed

y'all can't type for shit


y'all always gets people too.

You googled that didn't you?
 
Frisky said:
y'all always gets people too.

You googled that didn't you?
wow. I'm surprised to find that it's actually a word.

you-all
2 entries found for y'all.
To select an entry, click on it.
y'allyou-all

Main Entry: you-all
Pronunciation: yĂĽ-'ol, 'yĂĽ-"; 'yol
Variant(s): or y'all /'yol/
Function: pronoun
chiefly Southern : YOU -- usually used in addressing two or more persons
http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary
 
Smurfy said:
wow. I'm surprised to find that it's actually a word.

you-all
2 entries found for y'all.
To select an entry, click on it.
y'allyou-all

Main Entry: you-all
Pronunciation: yĂĽ-'ol, 'yĂĽ-"; 'yol
Variant(s): or y'all /'yol/
Function: pronoun
chiefly Southern : YOU -- usually used in addressing two or more persons
http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary
redneck language.
Do you know when I went to visit texas they actually sold redneck dictionaries? LOL No joke. I shall find it and post up some of the words and definitions.
 
Smurfy said:
wow. I'm surprised to find that it's actually a word.

you-all
2 entries found for y'all.
To select an entry, click on it.
y'allyou-all

Main Entry: you-all
Pronunciation: yĂĽ-'ol, 'yĂĽ-"; 'yol
Variant(s): or y'all /'yol/
Function: pronoun
chiefly Southern : YOU -- usually used in addressing two or more persons
http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary

Lol

Regional Note: The single most famous feature of Southern United States dialects is the pronoun y'all, sometimes heard in its variant you-all. You-all functions with perfect grammatical regularity as a second person plural pronoun, taking its own possessive you-all's (or less frequently, your-all's, where both parts of the word are inflected for possession): You-all's voices sound alike. Southerners do not, as is sometimes believed, use you-all or y'all for both singular and plural you. A single person may only be addressed as you-all if the speaker implies in the reference other persons not present: Did you-all [you and others] have dinner yet? You and you-all preserve the singular/plural distinction that English used to have in thou and ye, the subject forms of singular and plural you, respectively (thee and you were the singular and plural object forms). The distinction between singular thou/thee and plural ye/you began to blur as early as the 13th century, when the plural form was often used for the singular in formal contexts or to indicate politeness, much as the French use tu for singular and familiar “you,” and vous for both plural and polite singular “you.” In English, the object form you gradually came to be used in subject position as well, so that the four forms thou, thee, ye, and you collapsed into one form, you. Thou and thee were quite rare in educated speech in the 16th century, and they disappeared completely from standard English in the 18th. However, the distinction between singular and plural you is just as useful as that between other singular and plural pronoun forms, such as I and we. In addition to y'all, other forms for plural you include you-uns, youse, and you guys or youse guys. Youse is common in vernacular varieties in the Northeast, particularly in large cities such as New York and Boston, and is also common in Irish English. You-uns is found in western Pennsylvania and in the Appalachians and probably reflects the Scotch-Irish roots of many European settlers to these regions. You guys and youse guys appear to be newer innovations than the other dialectal forms of plural you. See note at you-uns.
 
Okay who is perfect though? I must say that I usually am just typing fast. I will admit that I most likely drive people crazy with my dots........he he.........:)
 
One thing I have to admit that bothers me when I see it, not that what I think matters to "y'all", but...

"BEING (or BEINGS) as you said you didnt like fish, I made ham instead."

I can't stand that butchering of the English language. It's, of course, nothing personal to those of you here who use it this way, but it's just plain wrong.
 
accept and except

I always catch myself proofing others stuff and it drives them crazy. lol

Can't help it if I am a perfectionist. hehehe
 
KSHARP01 said:
Okay who is perfect though? I must say that I usually am just typing fast. I will admit that I most likely drive people crazy with my dots........he he.........:)

it's ok, dear, no one's expecting you to make much sense.

*pat on the head*

:)
 
jackangel said:
it's ok, dear, no one's expecting you to make much sense.

*pat on the head*

:)


well, rub my belly when you get done patting me on the head***actually my tush needs a good rub also :qt:
 
stilleto said:
can i just add:

its "should HAVE" not "should OF".
:rolleyes:


omg.. you anal lil bitch

step off the box... now, really... step off if it now ;)
 
GoldenDelicious said:
i could care less, you know ;)

Yeah, well I couldn't. ;)
 
Angel said:
for,four (is there a fore?)
bath, bathe,
loose,lose


Those are some more that get mixed up easily
Fore is the one golfers use, and fore is also a prefix, e.g., foreleg, forehead, forehand.

Affect and Effect is the one that still trips me up.

I'm lousy with apostrophe S for some reason.
 
stilleto said:
Oh. i thought you said "anal ITCH". i was gonna ask how you knew.


you get that itch? I scratch my beaus balls all the time. He loves that shit
 
Thanks guys and gals for bringing up these other ones:

There, their, and they're
to, two, and too
choose and chose

I can usually decipher most people's inaccuracies, but sometimes I just skip reading posts that use the wrong spelling of the words as the meaning gets changed so much.

Oh and it's spelled DEFINITELY, not defenately, definetly, difenitly or any other way but the bolded way.

Cheers,
Scotsman
 
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