Especially fun when you understand the original language.Try watching a foreign film on netflix with subtitles the lips and facial expressions say one thing the voice overs say another and the subtitles say something else
Especially fun when you understand the original language.Try watching a foreign film on netflix with subtitles the lips and facial expressions say one thing the voice overs say another and the subtitles say something else
Touché.er....what HAD been written?
Feeling superior now!
Not really: "what had bin written" would merit that, but it was obvious here that you'd simply made a typo. As possibly(?) the only person here to have refereed fencing matches, I'd riposte to that attack with "Off target!"Touché.
No, I think typos are quite unforgivable.Not really: "what had bin written" would merit that, but it was obvious here that you'd simply made a typo. As possibly(?) the only person here to have refereed fencing matches, I'd riposte to that attack with "Off target!"
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Suture yourself.I imagine that you're largely correct about many people not liking to be corrected. However, when we communicate with others we're usually sending a host of ancillary messages which aren't necessarily visible or audible: tone of voice, facial expression, body language, choice of words etc. Sometimes those messages can be unclear, or misconstrued by the recipient. If we factor in the confusion resulting from the use of incorrect or ambiguous words, or the absence/misuse of punctuation, then we're just making communication harder - or sometimes impossible.
My take on the subject is not so much that people don't like to be corrected but more that they don't know the difference between "ignorant" and "stupid". We're all ignorant but only the stupid confuse the two, or don't welcome the opportunity to reduce their ignorance a little.
As for those who feel that getting the message across is the only thing that matters, while it's true that a good surgeon might well be able to accomplish wonders with a blunt cleaver, in the absence of a scalpel, I'd certainly prefer that he did it on someone else....
When I was working in Romania, I saw a movie that was US/English, dubbed into Romanian, but with a Russian commentary, and Latvian subtitles.Try watching a foreign film on netflix with subtitles the lips and facial expressions say one thing the voice overs say another and the subtitles say something else
But better than no message at all. It might even be something you need to know urgently!...... If we factor in the confusion resulting from the use of incorrect or ambiguous words, or the absence/misuse of punctuation, then we're just making communication harder - ......
Oh yes we are all extremely grateful when some tedious pedant points out all our little mistakes!My take on the subject is not so much that people don't like to be corrected but more that they don't know the difference between "ignorant" and "stupid". We're all ignorant but only the stupid confuse the two, or don't welcome the opportunity to reduce their ignorance a little.
That's like saying not knowing for sure that a gun will really kill someone is an excuse for murder. Poor spelling and grammar have no excuse, apart from those who aren't native speakers but are trying to improve their knowledge of the language in question. Ignorance in this context is entirely self-inflicted: if someone doesn't know how to drive a car, they have no business getting behind the wheel; if a native speaker doesn't know the niceties of the grammar of their own language, or how to spell or pronounce a word, they have no business using constructions they haven't yet grasped, or the word they can't handle properly.No, I think typos are quite unforgivable.
Bad spelling and grammar have ignorance as an excuse, and marks should be given for trying.
There are always people who are happy to roll in the mire, but I doubt that even you would welcome them into your home afterwards.But better than no message at all. It might even be something you need to know urgently!
Oh yes we are all extremely grateful when some tedious pedant points out all our little mistakes!
I can think of plenty of excuses for poor spelling and grammar. Some of the children in my child's class have parents who sell drugs and/or themselves, and have no interest in sitting down and teaching their children the finer points of the english language to their 5 year old. My child gets 15 spellings to learn and regularly get 15/15 (he enjoys reading and we play games and read together etc), one of the other kids gets 4 spellings and still doesn't get 4/4. Can't really blame that kid when he grows up and can't write properly. Not a whole lot you can do about it sadly as it takes more than just school to teach a child.Poor spelling and grammar have no excuse, apart from those who aren't native speakers but are trying to improve their knowledge of the language in question
Bad spellers are welcome here!There are always people who are happy to roll in the mire, but I doubt that even you would welcome them into your home afterwards.
You seem to know some intimate details of their lives? Do you check their children's spelling too?I can think of plenty of excuses for poor spelling and grammar. Some of the children in my child's class have parents who sell drugs and/or themselves, and have no interest in sitting down and teaching their children the finer points of the english language to their 5 year old.
not really intimate when they are smoking a joint walking their kid to school (some of the kids bags have to be left outside as they stink too much of weed), or seen selling drugs around town, or their pregnant GF turns up to school with a blackeye. Strangely enough I take an interest in my kids school and town.You seem to know some intimate details of their lives? Do you check their children's spelling too?
PS where should the apostrophe go in "childrens"? Does anybody know?
Good job they get their kids to school then.not really intimate when they are smoking a joint walking their kid to school (some of the kids bags have to be left outside as they stink too much of weed), or seen selling drugs around town, or their pregnant GF turns up to school with a blackeye. Strangely enough I take an interest in my kids school and town.
er... yes, in principle.Would you prefer everyone turns a blind eye?
Phil touchy is spelt with a yTouché.
..... "Marks for trying" is presumably some kind of joke - you get marks for trying AND succeeding; the notion of "10% for getting your name right" is what started the race for the bottom that so many of us are striving to "win".
It's interesting to me that you pick something like guitar music as an example of a structured and rigid format. It really isn't. Most guitarists will change what they play in different settings and whenever there mood changes. Loads of videos on 'how to play X properly' and they will look through videos of live performances and show you the numerous different ways the guitarist plays the same song. But 99% of people won't even notice.
If I played sweet child of mine and missed a few notes in the solo you'd still know what I was playing, same as missing a few commas in a sentence. I guess if I was playing in an orchestra then missing a note would be a problem as it would put the other musicians off their part. Which I guess is akin to it not being a problem missing a few commas on a forum post but it potentially causing an issue on a court document or police report.
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