I'm just a high school ger-adge-eee-yate so I am not as smart as your average college puke or so they would think. That said it annoys the heck out of me that people cannot comprehend the simple usage of the words there, their, and they're or when every first sentence is started with Well..... or So.....
I am not bothered so much by it here or in other forums as I am when I see it in the world of journalism. Those so called professionals supposedly learned sentence structure and grammar in high school and then perfected it through college. Yet they often write and/or speak as illiterate as a 12 year old. They use words like irregardless or boughten......both of which are not accepted words in the speech. What is the difference between REGARDLESS or the stupid over stated word IRREGARDLESS? And BOUGHTEN? Really? Used in a sentence, "It's store boughten" rather than "It's store bought". THERE IS NO SUCH WORD AS BOUGHTEN!
Last but not least USE verses UTILIZE. People try to sound over intelligent by using utilize in place of use. If a product is performing its work as designed it is BEING USED. E.G. "I used the spatula to flip the hamburger". On the other hand if I reassign something to be used in a manner it was not designed though it works well in that way it is being UTILIZED. E.G. I utilized the spatula to scratch my itchy back."
I see things like this all the time in articles written by "accomplished journalist scholars". Seriously? They went to 4 more years of college to make grammar, and sentence structure, mistakes that an average high school grad can pick up on? Sounds to me like either college has gotten so easy I could get a degree, or college grads think they can overly rely on computers to catch all their mistakes today.
Yeah but enginecycle doesn’t sound rightect rather than ETC. ETC is the abbreviation for etcetera.
Personally I refuse to refer to the power generating machine under the hood as a "MOTOR". It's an ENGINE. Motors are in Teslas and on furnaces, power lifts, conveyors, CNC machining centers, CNC Lasers, belt driven turntables, 8 track tape players, exhaust fans......they have windings in them.
An engine is under the hood of an automobile. I don't give a damn what the British call it....its a fricking engine. LOL!
I always refer to an electric motor or a combustion engine.
Or Ford Motor Company. The idea that motor is electric and engine is mechanical is in the definition of neither.No more Motorsports, motorboating, motorcade, motorists, or built-motors, for you. Kidding of course.
“Camero”
Always appears on Craigslist every once and a while.
We will get thru this though.Yes, English can be weird. It can be understood through tough, thorough thought though.