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Geoff45
01-03-2016, 10:20 PM
Grammar 101:question:
1. Your book (ownership)
2. You're taking images (you're=you are)
3. It's not working (it's=it is)
4. The cat drinks its milk (ownership)

Atmos
01-03-2016, 10:22 PM
Grammar Nazi on the loose!

ChrisM
01-03-2016, 10:34 PM
You're quite right with your grammar Geoff, and it's a pity that so many people these days just don't get it. Apart from some teachers not knowing their grammar, I blame computers in that now anyone can readily print the written word whether it be right or wrong, and once printed it looks official, so it must be right!

madwayne
01-03-2016, 10:39 PM
They're their there Geoff😀

Wayne

Eden
01-03-2016, 10:51 PM
I recommend Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation by Lynne Truss.

Comes complete with a punctuation repair kit! ;-)

xelasnave
01-03-2016, 11:02 PM
A cat has no ownership rights.

RobF
01-03-2016, 11:31 PM
On ya Geoff. I'm amazed how many intelligent people say "anythink" quite nonchalantly. Another one that bugs me.

sharpiel
02-03-2016, 12:04 AM
Ahhhhhhh Alex :D

PCH
02-03-2016, 12:07 AM
For the 'ownership' example, you could have added that normally an apostrophe is in order - as in "John's book was open". The example you chose is the exception to this rule, - its - being a possessive pronoun.

Just sayin'

PCH
02-03-2016, 12:08 AM
Tell my dog that as he tries in vain to get his bed back once the cat has bagged it!

PCH
02-03-2016, 12:10 AM
... And let's not forget Leon with his dose for does!

Only meant in good humour Leon, - no offence intended :)

michaellxv
02-03-2016, 12:11 AM
As long as we are being picky, I am amazed at the number of people who can't tell the difference between then and than.

PCH
02-03-2016, 12:13 AM
I would 'of' thought it was clear enough!

multiweb
02-03-2016, 01:03 AM
Not at all. Just common sense. Grammar is there for a reason.

drylander
02-03-2016, 01:21 AM
then there is payed, loose for lose grrrrr
Pete

csb
02-03-2016, 02:39 AM
I have often wondered what is the use of certain grammatical marks and conventions.

Using a capital at the start of a sentence is superfluous. There is a full stop AND a space at the end of the previous sentence. Do we really need three alerts to show a new sentence has started.

I use/try to use correct written grammar at all times but it is becoming a little time consuming in the digital age. Our written grammar will surely change due to technology. And change is not an unusual occurance for any language.

multiweb
02-03-2016, 09:43 AM
English is not my native language so I guess I try to pay attention a little more to what I write and the way I write it. The rules you are talking about are present in many other languages. Although you can map words to words most of the time from one language to the other, the order of the words and the structure of the sentences can be radically different. I find English is very popular because the words are fairly short, not many declination in verbs and hardly any genres in adjectives or prepositions. That level of simplicity made it a prime candidate for a base that everybody can learn. That's also why programming languages are based on English words. I agree that languages evolve over time but what you see online these days is at best ridiculous. Geoff has a very valid point. It really makes me cringe when I see University level kids making that kind of mistakes. In my eyes it looks really bad. There also seems to be a trend of labelling people who care about good spelling and syntax "grammar Nazis". So what's the next trend? "Maths Nazis" because 2+2 could be 5 in the near future? :lol:

csb
02-03-2016, 10:04 AM
A correction for my comment about using capitals at the start of a sentence: the space after a full stop is actually standard and necessary convention to seperate words.

I also cringe when someone makes grammatical errors.

When writing txt messages I feel wrong when I don't use correct grammar or punctuation but it makes it more expedient. I suppose grammar is a cultural part of us.

blink138
02-03-2016, 10:20 AM
yep!.....................

Kunama
02-03-2016, 10:34 AM
English, being such an easy language, should be mastered by the majority by the time they have completed their secondary education. Unfortunately many teachers have yet to do so thus perpetuating the problem.
English, as it is spoken today, is but a mere shadow of the language it was a century ago. There are now so many words and concepts that originated in other realms that the language has come to resemble vegetable soup.

The primary purpose of a language is to communicate effectively but there is nothing written that states such aims could not be achieved with some flair. On the subject of capitals, a paragraph or chapter written without correctly placed capitals and punctuation, or worse still in ALL UPPER CASE, takes more than twice as long to read with much reduced comprehension.

Please pardon my poor control of this language for it was not my first, second or third language, being preceded by Finnish, Swedish, Italian and German.

julianh72
02-03-2016, 10:40 AM
i have often wondered what is the use of certain grammatical marks and conventions. using a capital at the start of a sentence is superfluous. there is a full stop and a space at the end of the previous sentence. do we really need three alerts to show a new sentence has started.

Which version is quicker and easier to process when you read it?

Grammar, punctuation and spelling conventions are there to aid readability and comprehension (even if the rules do seem a bit arbitrary and even contradictory at times).

i shddr evry tym sum1 snds me an email in unpnctuatd txt-speek and xpcts me to undrstnd wot they r syng!

Huey
02-03-2016, 10:55 AM
...... and then there is their and there.
But what I think is happening is the widespread use of texting. Students and some teachers often use "texting language" in their work and consequently many students think it is acceptable. Furthermore, in some faculties you can correct the mistakes but are not allowed to deduct marks for poor spelling and grammar. This achieves nothing more than perpetuating the problems this thread is about.
In addition, you can also see misspellings more frequently in television and don't get me started on Americanisms that slowly creep into the language. That can be another thread;)

Just my thoughts. Clear skies
Huey

GeoffW1
02-03-2016, 11:01 AM
Hope you have your (note that) tongue in your (aha, another one) cheek.

If not that makes you an illiteracy Nazi.

Only half-joking too

Geoff

bugeater
02-03-2016, 11:16 AM
While I personally hate it when people mix up homophones, it's worth remembering that languages evolve over time. Too many seem to think language should remain static.

csb
02-03-2016, 11:22 AM
Oh, readability! Thanks Julian, that is quite true. And flair was mentioned which also helps us to enjoy what we read.

RB
02-03-2016, 11:40 AM
Yeah I hate it too, that's why I like to label each of our phones, 'kitchen', 'lounge', 'bedroom' and 'hallway'.
Each goes back onto its own basestation.

:lol:

gary
02-03-2016, 12:18 PM
Clearly it's a problem that starts with our educators and sets back the brightest of students.

The teacher walks into the room and says, "Open you're books" instead of "Open your books".

The bright kids with a complete grasp of grammar sit there dumbfounded as to what was just said.

The grammatically ignorant open their books.

sharptrack2
02-03-2016, 12:35 PM
But they sound the same when spoken! :question: :poke: :rofl:

MortonH
02-03-2016, 12:40 PM
I'm battling with my 7-year-old daughter to stop her using an apostrophe in plurals. She claims her school teachers don't write it but where else would she be picking it up from?

Misuse of apostrophes was almost non-existent a few years ago. Now hardly anyone seems to get it right. How did this happen?

eyepieces not eyepiece's
skies not sky's
etc

multiweb
02-03-2016, 12:40 PM
C'mon Gary, nowadays it's "open yooze bookz". Gotta say it the kool way.

Kunama
02-03-2016, 12:57 PM
The sky's revenge for not keeping your eyepiece's caps on are clouds. Clear skies and enjoy your eyepieces.
An apostrophe's purpose is often misunderstood.

AndrewJ
02-03-2016, 02:03 PM
And they'ren't the same

Andrew

julianh72
02-03-2016, 02:33 PM
I shouldn't've doubted whether "they'ren't" is a valid word.

Y'all'll be pleased to know that I just checked, and it's real. I sha'n't doubt your veracity again! :P

AstralTraveller
02-03-2016, 03:35 PM
What happened to the rule that you can't have two apostrophes in a word? I'm sure I learned that at school.

Octane
02-03-2016, 03:41 PM
Let's eat grandma.

Let's eat, grandma.

The man saw the boy with the telescope.

H

Sconesbie
02-03-2016, 03:49 PM
One that gets me is "could/would/should of" instead of "have". Even adults who should know better. I have even observed this in print media (large newspaper).

Eden
02-03-2016, 04:15 PM
Not to mention helping Grandpa Jack off his horse without the appropriate use of capital letters...:lol:

AndrewJ
02-03-2016, 05:04 PM
Lots of words now use double apostrophes
Shouldn't've is the one that most comes to mind ( Julian agrees :-) ).
I guess the rule of grammar club is that if a rule doesn't work,
make a special mnemonic up, then memorise the overrides.
ie I before E except after C
and then if that doesn't work, make a list of exceptions.
like "when the sound is E or A"

Andrew

blink138
02-03-2016, 05:15 PM
[QUOTE=bugeater;1234546]While I personally hate it when people mix up homophones,

enough of that, please read IIS TOS! haha!
pat

PCH
02-03-2016, 05:31 PM
There's two in foc's'le meaning nautical forecastle at the front of a ship, and that's definitely valid :)

AndrewJ
02-03-2016, 05:49 PM
And if we followed "the rules", that would really be fo'c's'le.
We have a winner with three.

Andrew

Atmos
02-03-2016, 07:52 PM
Not one that I have ever come across, I never would have thought it possible!





Most certainly was meant tongue in cheek, I am as much of a grammar nazi as the rest. When I am writing a text I will go back to fix a grammatical error. Spent so much time having to be grammatically correct that I do actually find it more difficult to write grammatically incorrect as it requires more of a forethought.



I watched this a while back and found it quite interesting/entertaining :) Good ol' Stephen Fry.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ovi7uQbtKas





I personally find it considerably easier to read WITH capital letters at the beginning of each sentence. A full stop it pretty easy to glance over, as do all of the spaces between words because every wordhasone :P

Going back to the point that Stephen Fry was making, it is not always 100% about being grammatically correct, just getting the point across in the easiest and most comprehensible way possible. We've dropped all of the "thee, they & thous" out of todays speak, kids these days do not really know what they mean. Calling someone "dumb" in the distant past meant that you were a mute, unable to speak, hence the word "dumbfounded" or rendered speechless.

It was not that long ago that Tom Elliot on 3AW (talkback radio) was talking about grammar these days, bought up by what I think may have been a letter to The Age from someone saying that we should just have one “there” and forget all of the others.
The email I ended up sending in is as follows.

Geoff45
02-03-2016, 08:01 PM
Amazing number of responses.! Wish I could get as many when I post an image.

RB
02-03-2016, 08:17 PM
Just add or leave out an apostrophe or two in your description of said image.

:P

FlashDrive
02-03-2016, 09:14 PM
eye spose wee kan agwee on won ting .... fairynuff .

:lol:

GeoffW1
02-03-2016, 09:18 PM
People are changing by example.

I learned language by reading, anything and everything. Soon enough I had favourites (Biggles in Yr 3), as I do now (John Sandford, Iain M Banks). Now though, there is much more stuff our youngsters can spend their (twang) time with. Maybe grammar is not such a big deal with these new pursuits.

Apostrophe Man used to have a big presence, at least in Sydney, in the Herald. Then, I think due to cost-cutting, Fairfax sacked their (bull's-eye) sub-editors in 2011 and outsourced that work. As I recall it, Apostrophe Man was called upon less after then. They announced in 2014 they would do the same in their (again, ten-ring, wow) regional rags. Nowadays you can notice a shocking, just shocking, level of grammar in their (oh, it's hard to be humble, 2-in-1) articles and captions.

Now, I like good grammar, but am also aware that most languages evolve. New words appear (eg grammer, spelt, ignorence, untill), and others fall out of usage (eg grammar, spelled, ignorance, until). This happens to other languages as well. Older French were horrified when their youngsters began saying things like "Le Hamburger", and tried to ban the term. Fat chance, just like the food.

However evolution is not the same as mangling in situ (could have said 'mangulation', see?). If you have a particular word, and it is not being replaced in common usage by another, but simply being mangled and misused in context, that might be a horse of a different hue, do you think?

So all of us like myself who pine for the old ways probably should remember that Canute could not prevent the tide from advancing, and take to making squeaks of protest on sites like this

https://www.facebook.com/groups/18217727083/?fref=ts

Anyway cheerz

KenGee
02-03-2016, 09:58 PM
I'm going to buck the trend and say the whole thread is silly. The English language is quite hard to learn because there are very few rules. in fact many of the rules are actually wrong. I before e except after C is a classic.

More importantly English is very fluid and grammar changes as well as spelling, so...

you are = U R
you're = UR

and 1000 years ago it was ēower.

Steffen
03-03-2016, 12:31 AM
You probably meant this in jest but this is exactly how people are looking at the typical astro image. The subject is mostly well known and has usually not changed in recent memory. All everybody is looking for are technical defects or errors in the image. Focus, tracking, field rotation, exposure, post-processing etc. make up the difference between two images of the same DSO.

For me this is also the reason why I don't look at many astro images anymore, let alone attempt to capture any myself.

There are obvious exceptions, for example images of changing objects (planets, Sun, comets, nightscapes, astronomical events, etc).

bobson
03-03-2016, 01:15 AM
Ewe?

Is it about time to change how we spell "female sheep"? :)

Steffen
03-03-2016, 01:40 AM
I agree, if only because most of the errors mentioned are not grammatical but orthographic in nature.

Grammar takes place in the language centre of the brain. It is a subconsciously performed task and allows people to speak and understand correct sentences with apparent ease. The grammatical rules (syntax, morphology) of the mother tongue are imprinted into the language centre from very early childhood on. Grammar does not concern itself with spelling, it exists independently from the written language.

Orthography is the standardisation of word images. It became necessary when people moved on from having to sound out written texts. In ancient Rome for example people could not usually read silently. Being able to do so seemed like a bewildering talent to regular people, much like reading musical notes and hearing the music would seem to us. People had to read written texts by speaking letter after letter and listening to what came out of their mouths.

Today (and probably for the last 1000 to 1500 years) we read silently by detecting whole words or phrases simply by their looks that we had to learn and memorise in a long and arduous childhood effort. If this act of pattern recognition is to be performed at any degree of efficiency and speed it requires a certain amount of standardisation. It is no surprise that the first orthographic rule systems evolved out of conventions developed among typesetters.

Besides those word images orthography also contains a number of signs that make up for the loss of information originally contained in the spoken conversation (pauses, melody, etc). Each of those signs indicates one thing and one thing only. A space indicates the end of a word, a full stop the end of a sentence, a comma indicates an enumeration, an apostrophe the omission of letters, and so on. The important thing about orthographic signs is that they are not processed by the language centre (like spoken language) but interpreted by the conscious mind. Even though they are often required to remove ambiguity and improve clarity they always make the brain stop and thereby disrupt the reading flow.

The sole purpose of orthography is to write fast and read even faster. When writing texts intended for others one should always have the reader in mind. It is therefore important to remove anything that is jarring to the reader and pulls him away from the sensual immersion in the story you're trying to tell. Really good prose for example doesn't need many commas at all. If a sentence needs a comma in order to be understood then it will most likely benefit from revision. See what I did there? And there? Writing orthographically correct is not always optimal.

Picking the wrong spelling from a set of homophones is almost always jarring to the reader because the word image points the reader in the wrong direction. This is why the there/their/they're example always features prominently in spelling Nazi threads, and justly so.

But just to prolong the nitpicking thread, my personal pet peeve is the overuse of quotation marks. Most often when I encounter them nothing is being quoted at all. The role of quotation marks is to interrupt the story teller's voice and let someone else have a word. They are not signs for emphasis, irony or any of the other purposes people often use them for.

AstralTraveller
03-03-2016, 12:11 PM
I certainly say "shouldn't've" but I would never write it. I find "shouldn't have" or even "should not have" much easier to read. Similarly I understand sailors shortening forecastle to foc's'le but if you were, for instance, labeling a diagram of a ship or putting up location signs on a ship I imagine you would write 'forecastle'. I think you only use these contractions when quoting speech.

"I shouldn't've left the foc's'le when I did", said the captain.

The captain said he should not have left the forecastle when he did.

deanm
03-03-2016, 01:23 PM
Accurate grammar in writing reduces ambiguity of meaning and adds precision of intent.

Spoken language is rather different - other non-verbal signals (tone of voice, inflexion, body language, gestures etc.) add cues that are (typically) absent from the written word.

A topical example: Donald Trump on TV.

The content of what he says is usually undiluted crap & repetitive.

But look at how he delivers his verbiage!

Dean

julianh72
03-03-2016, 02:06 PM
But "you're" is a contraction of "you are", so surely they are both the same in "Text-Speak".

And what about "your"?

kittenshark
03-03-2016, 05:09 PM
Your're its'.

:P

xelasnave
03-03-2016, 05:57 PM
i fink speaking is good but writing it down means you have said nothing.
i blame all those who write stuff down but do'nt speak in a manner that couldn't be understood if it were written in a language not understood by the audience.

it is what it is and the fact humans can communicate using speech more sophisticated than grunts and hand movements is remarkable.

if stuff upsets you it is no ones fault but your own as it is ones qualification that all things take on a good or bad judgment( personalized judgemen)t call.
g
humans make rules humans break rules why does such behaviour require judgement if for no other reason than seeing oneself better or worse than another.

rwe write or notright grammer y should be less important than communicating ones speech via righting.

And I am not trying to clever I am just so drunkI can't move????

PCH
03-03-2016, 06:03 PM
By the end of the first sentence I'd gathered that Alex. Cheers :drink:

xelasnave
03-03-2016, 06:47 PM
well you can not, without breaking a rule, start a sentence with "and" so the last sentence must be struck out.
I believe the game is all about communicating so to get hung up on strict addhestsnce tp a rule perhaps Mrs the point.
I am in Sydney and I am as board as a plank.

deanm
03-03-2016, 07:58 PM
Good onya, Alex - part of the nocturnal life of many amateur astronomers (Hic!).

Cheers!

Dean

xelasnave
03-03-2016, 09:25 PM
I lied I don't drink anything other than milk or orange juice Ior my rain water up home

xelasnave
03-03-2016, 10:35 PM
sorry tea maybe coffee no booze
and sorry for being silly
had a hard but productive day

xelasnave
03-03-2016, 10:50 PM
There are trees everywhere and only viewing area is a cement hot patio that does not seem too cool.
I miss the sky like you could not believe.

Matt Wastell
06-03-2016, 04:53 PM
I have read this entire trail & the laughing has brought a tear to my eye - off to the hospital for some stitches!

Decimus
06-03-2016, 05:25 PM
I'm with you, Matt. This is the best thread on IIS - entertainment plus. Love the humour, guys.
Richard

astroron
06-03-2016, 06:56 PM
You obviously DO understand what they are saying ,so why are you shuddering:shrug:
Cheers:thumbsup:

MortonH
06-03-2016, 08:58 PM
I'm all for language evolving. And there are plenty of unnecessary and illogical complexities in the English language.

When it comes to basic punctuation, however, we shouldn't just throw out the rules because today's kids are too lazy or stupid to learn them.

xelasnave
06-03-2016, 09:19 PM
I think there must be an app to correct formal letters maybe.
I was at one time very sensitive about grammar.
I drafted court orders from the judges notes.
Being careful with the way I express myself is so much like work.

Neutronstar
08-03-2016, 12:48 PM
0m6 7h15 7hr34d 15 l337