J
jfc40ts
Guest
Maybe the thread and the one that suddenly reared its ugly head ARE related. It seems our language (at least in the US) has undergone seismic activities of varying degrees...
umtrr author said,
Like it or not, English is being dumbed down by people who apparently revel in their stupidity and most people just follow along. It seems that other aspects of everyday life is following suit. Some years ago, the late comedian Steve Allen wrote a book called Dumbth, which hit the nail on the head. To see where this could all lead to, there was a movie made a few years ago called Idiocracy which seems to be the roadmap society is following...
Should sloppy speech, spelling and grammar be acceptible and become the norm? Certainly not the examples others have brought up in their posts. I'm not a frustrated English teacher or grammar freak who cringes when someone ends a sentence with a preposition, but I do feel that even slang should follow the "rules of the road".
Those of us in mass communication, whatever the form, should strive to be the standard for others. After all, our written and spoken words reach more eyes and ears than a normal conversation...
umtrr author said,
I once spent a non-trivial amount of time editing a "formal external document" (can't be more specific than that) changing, among other things, all of the improperly used "it's" to the proper "its."
When I returned the next morning, all of those errors had been put back in and I was told that I didn't know what I was doing.
Like it or not, English is being dumbed down by people who apparently revel in their stupidity and most people just follow along. It seems that other aspects of everyday life is following suit. Some years ago, the late comedian Steve Allen wrote a book called Dumbth, which hit the nail on the head. To see where this could all lead to, there was a movie made a few years ago called Idiocracy which seems to be the roadmap society is following...
Should sloppy speech, spelling and grammar be acceptible and become the norm? Certainly not the examples others have brought up in their posts. I'm not a frustrated English teacher or grammar freak who cringes when someone ends a sentence with a preposition, but I do feel that even slang should follow the "rules of the road".
Those of us in mass communication, whatever the form, should strive to be the standard for others. After all, our written and spoken words reach more eyes and ears than a normal conversation...