I'm With Stupid
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 6 May 2013
- Messages
- 23,916
Not just Americans.Americans say "aksed a question". It IS Americans that have caused this lazy grammar that we see and hear.
Not just Americans.Americans say "aksed a question". It IS Americans that have caused this lazy grammar that we see and hear.
Not just Americans.
To be fair, we do the same. "PSG are the current CL holders". PSG is a singular entity, not plural. So, shouldn't that be "is the current CL holders"?Don't get me started on Americans, because the next sentence will be 'they are looking really good here.' They'll literally give all of their sports teams plural names - the Knicks, the Broncos, the Yankees - and then claim that teams are singular.
I say 'innit'. Have done all my life. Not ''blud', though...I still say "mate" but I get mocked for it.That’s only used by one group of Americans, like innit blud
That is one that pisses me off more than it should.“Have” not “of”….that’s another that bugs me
Eccles Blue used to like my posts when I highlighted it :)
So what is it then? ;-)Railway station ffs.
It’s not a train station.
It’s a railway station.So what is it then? ;-)
Mrs Vienna used to say, Chimbley.Steak and Kidley pie.
One of Twatterface's most annoying phrases.“Off of”.
I’ve always said, "Heigth".People in Florida say irregardless instead of regardless. And they actually say heigth instead of height. Drives me crazy.
Starting a sentence with, "I mean".The overuse of the word ‘literally’.
Starting a sentence with ‘So’.
‘Lol’.
Also, with "and".The overuse of the word ‘literally’.
Starting a sentence with ‘So’.
‘Lol’.
You’re quite correct.Is there for singular, are there for plural....simple, basic English.....or am I missing something ?