The Atheist
The Grammar Tyrant
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2006
- Messages
- 36,374
Damn, now I just HAVE to change my name! Brilliant!Some people are athey, some are athier, but only one can be The Athiest.
I rarely see someone similarly misspell theist or theism.
Damn, now I just HAVE to change my name! Brilliant!Some people are athey, some are athier, but only one can be The Athiest.
I rarely see someone similarly misspell theist or theism.
It follows rules, as long as you know which particular conqueror of England brought that particular word along with them.The only firm rule in English is that most of the rules have so many exceptions to them that they might as well not be considered rules at all. This frustrates the speakers of more logical languages. To whom we reply, when they rant about it, "you are looking at the English and expecting logic, and you think we're the crazy ones?"
Learn something new everyday.
Since we're in a thread about a misspelled word... "everyday" is an adjective for something you encounter often. "Every day" is a phrase meaning all days. You learn something new every day, but you don't always learn everyday thingsLearn something new everyday.
Since we're in a thread about a misspelled word... "everyday" is an adjective for something you encounter often. "Every day" is a phrase meaning all days. You learn something new every day, but you don't always learn everyday things![]()
R-biker: Weird Carp! First, the root is "theism" or "theist", so the pronunciation when you add the prefix is "ay-thee-ist".... Second, I think T.A. knows, for instance that Philanthropist is pronounced phil-an-thro-pist, but was just using it to show the "ist" is a suffix.
I didn't mean to type "Carp!", my cube neighbor just asked me to identify a fish.
)A dutch guy, Dr. Gerald Nolst Trenite (1870-1946), wrote a very fun poem about some inconsistencies in English, especially when it comes to pronunciation.The only firm rule in English is that most of the rules have so many exceptions to them that they might as well not be considered rules at all. This frustrates the speakers of more logical languages. To whom we reply, when they rant about it, "you are looking at the English and expecting logic, and you think we're the crazy ones?"
Ancient science.I before E except after C, remember?
The best way to get under my skin is to misspell "lose" as "loose". I see it every day, and for some reason it really frustrates me. It's a sickness, and I'm seeking treatment.
That frustrates me too. I've read so many flame wars where people have called one another 'Looser' rather than 'Loser.'
My spelling and grammar aren't perfect, but the made up word which annoys me more than any other is 'alot.'![]()
As an aside my favorite examples of the idiocy of the English language is that comb rhymes with dome but not with bomb and dome rhymes with comb but not with come.