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Deleted member 473
Acorns needed.Shall I get scratty about that?
Acorns needed.Shall I get scratty about that?
I hadn't realised that until you made me look it up!The difference between judgement and judgment is more subtle and both are correct in British English
Excellent, that works in Chrome too. "Realised" no longer raises its hackles.Probably got US English selected
Right click while replying and select Languages
In Opera I get English UK, English US and English as a third option. So what is English?I hadn't realised that until you made me look it up!
Excellent, that works in Chrome too. "Realised" no longer raises its hackles.
I don't know, but the options in Chrome were "English (American)" or "English", and selecting the latter got rid of the squiggles.So what is English?
What I suggest is compile a draft post containing all manner of disputed spellings and see which of those each language version rejects.In Opera I get English UK, English US and English as a third option.
Much to my surprise, I discovered it can be "eyeing" or "eying" according to whim (only the latter fitted the crossword).The difference between judgement and judgment is more subtle and both are correct in British English
"Pfizer for me", not "Pfizer for I". So "Pfizer for my wife and me".
No, the usual form would be "Pfizer for me and my wife".
My wife and I are going on holiday vs. I and my wife are going on holidayIgnorance rules yet again? Except that it is English convention to put any third parties before yourself in a list.
There's no "sounds more likely" about it. It's just plain wrong to put yourself first.
And I note that you quote 'the Queen's English as she are spoke' as well. And I would have thought that HM had every right to put herself first, but doesn't.
It's the modern (American) trend to make sentences more flowery than they need to be.What about that monstrosity
Myself and my wife are having a jab
No, they decided for themselves it must be wrong because of incomplete education (it must be wrong to put myself first in a sentence - no, it depends on grammatical context). In the case you cite, neither "myself" nor "me" is appropriate (should be "my wife and I").I guess people were told Me and my wife was wrong
By the way: I've just found out the reason a split infinitive is frowned upon is simply because it is impossible to express in Latin.
What's that when it's at home?
A derivative of Esperanto with a more logical grammar.:sigh: