Grammar and spelling
While I do not always write grammatically correct and have the occasional spelling error or typo, it still bothers me to see it in articles and posts. The question is this: does it bother others, and if so, does it lower your opinion of the author and the subject at hand?
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stage; the biker fell off OF his bike. The "of" is
totally unnecessary. And the misuse of "ITS" and "IT IS" is another error to see.
A little background: my husband worked for a government agency, won't tell you which one, and at times was an expert witness in legal actions brought by the government in criminal and civil cases. He had no use for Bureau-Spk.
But this one he really hated:
"...in close proximity to...", or "...in the near proximity of..."
Are you a student of dialectics, by any chance?
By the way, Mike can sometimes slyly slip in a few tongue-in-cheek conceptual formations. You gotta watch out for that.
I was quite familiar with your appropriate scrod joke from when I lived in Boston. Back then, if the cab driver drove to the noun instead of the pluperfect subjunctive, it would have been to Anthony’s Pier Four (to which I had been several times) or Jimmy’s Harborside (I had one dinner there.) Anthony’s was torn down and replaced by condos, and Jimmy’s is now Legal Harborside. That’s okay—the only seafood I eat is saltwater taffy. Only ten years to go for the bicentennial birthday of Durgin-Park restaurant (in Boston). I’ve been making their Baked Indian Pudding at least once a year for the past 40 years. I use their recipe published in Collier's Magazine many decades earlier.
That's why The Good Lord gave you all me, to be your editor.
I was getting too many points, so thanks.
(I can't believe that you got two plusses for that. I took one away.)
As for the history of thought as expressed in language etymologies, it would be helpful to look past the Indo-Europeans, certainly beyond English and Latin, though knowing Latin is extremely helpful. (I am sure that your is far superior to mine.) I grew up with Hungarian, a non-Indo-European language. I also had two semesters of Japanese in college. I do agree with your theory about tense and time. In Turkish, all of the verbs are regular, except the verb "to be." You may be on to something there...
A traveling salesman who was a seafood lover finally got sent to Boston. Deplaning at Logan, he got his bags and made for the taxi stands. He jumped in the first one. "Do you know where I can get scrod in Boston?" he asked. The driver turned around and said, "Mister, I've been asked that question a million times, but never in the pluperfect subjunctive."
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