Hey, that rhymesconsidering I routinely mistype hate as had I think my their/there typos are not so bad.
Hey, that rhymesconsidering I routinely mistype hate as had I think my their/there typos are not so bad.
I got mad rhymez boyeeHey, that rhymes
I did when I was a kid, and someone told me "All forms of "there/their/they're" begin with 'the'." Never messed it up since.I do have a hell of a time with the i and e placement in their.... see now, I'm not even sure if I have it right in this post.
That segment includes one of my favourite insults from Fry, "Are you even capable of rational thought?"I hate the whole "i before e except after c" rule. There are actually more words that "break" that rule than there are that follow it. Something I'd always suspected, and QI backed me up on it not too long ago.
OH MY GOD....I did when I was a kid, and someone told me "All forms of "there/their/they're" begin with 'the'." Never messed it up since.
Oh yes. This is probably my number one grammar pet peeve. It is nearly always the manager level and higher that uses this. I think it's because everyone had their knuckles rapped one too many times about the misuse of I/me, so they avoid the issue altogether by substituting in another word.People who misuse "myself" when trying to sound overly formal. "Jim and myself worked on those TPS reports..."
I'm ausemd by atomuitac stitubutions in a day and age where every Ngiegr Fgaogt realizes you can just scramble the letters of a word, leaving the first and last intact, and the word is still entirely legible.
Only if the person I'm talking to is aware of who the other person I'm referring to is. Pronouns don't really work unless the proper noun has been used already.Heh, you could just simplify it with "This is our alarm clock."
It's all over my resume.It's also effective to say "This is Matt's and my bitchin' alarm clock." The use of "bitchin" in the sentence distracts from any grammatical clunkiness.
This technique works in any number of grammatically-awkward situations. I suggest using it in the next paper or report you have to write.
Sorry, what'd you say, Bowielee?