Lori Posted May 3, 2010 Posted May 3, 2010 geez...high school english class or bills board? Nope. Doc's a college prof, not a high school teacher.
Dr. K Posted May 3, 2010 Author Posted May 3, 2010 Nope. Doc's a college prof, not a high school teacher. I still make mistakes, though. I forgot an apostrophe in a post earlier in this thread. It's finals week at NC State. Lots of nervous and exhausted undergrads. None of them have NFL contracts awaiting them after they graduate, just the same search for work and a place in the world all of us have. But at least they are only 22. *sigh*
birdog1960 Posted May 3, 2010 Posted May 3, 2010 I still make mistakes, though. I forgot an apostrophe in a post earlier in this thread. It's finals week at NC State. Lots of nervous and exhausted undergrads. None of them have NFL contracts awaiting them after they graduate, just the same search for work and a place in the world all of us have. But at least they are only 22. *sigh* let the red ink fly! my recently graduated lawyer niece recently sent me a thank you note extolling my wife and i as "roll models" (maybe she felt the gift too small). i'm a couple of pounds over ideal body weight but really don't deserve that. it was unexpected from someone who should be a bit of a wordsmith. grammar is important in work or school related documents and even in traditional letter writing. i think , for better or worse, bad grammar is acceptable and even expected on the internet.
GG Posted May 3, 2010 Posted May 3, 2010 i think , for better or worse, bad grammar is acceptable and even expected on the internet. Only if its intentional.
cåblelady Posted May 3, 2010 Posted May 3, 2010 prolly You been listening to the boyz at my house? *LOL* I am now saying/texting "prolly" and "kk" instead of ok.
Clippers of Nfl Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 Now if we can get people to stop typing "should of" and "would of" instead of the correct "should have", "should've", "would have" and "would've". Drives me crazy, especially since we're writing here people, not speaking. really this drives you crazy? i didn't want to loose that game. ok, most of us know it's lose. so freaking what if our bills compadres cant spell. i honestly dont care. well maybe thats why i dont capitalize anything...
Clippers of Nfl Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 geez...high school english class or bills board? GREAT POINT. by the way, dont get mad. you will see this crap in a month or so.
/dev/null Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 You been listening to the boyz at my house? *LOL* I am now saying/texting "prolly" and "kk" instead of ok. texting is one thing but saying "kk" and "prolly" ("prolly" shouldn't even be texted, but that's another story). Do you really find your self saying "kk" and "prolly" in daily conversation Oh well, to be fair I know a girl that regularly says "OMG"
Jukester Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 let the red ink fly! my recently graduated lawyer niece recently sent me a thank you note extolling my wife and i as "roll models" (maybe she felt the gift too small). i'm a couple of pounds over ideal body weight but really don't deserve that. it was unexpected from someone who should be a bit of a wordsmith. grammar is important in work or school related documents and even in traditional letter writing. i think , for better or worse, bad grammar is acceptable and even expected on the internet. Uh, probably runs in the family. Can't escape genetics. Should be "extolling my wife and me"
Chalkie Gerzowski Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 You been listening to the boyz at my house? *LOL* I am now saying/texting "prolly" and "kk" instead of ok. I am not sure where I first heard or read "prolly". I have seen it quite a bit though, online anyway. I wonder if it is a WNY thing... thinking back I believe I have heard people shorten probably to "prolly".
iinii Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 Now if we can get people to stop typing "should of" and "would of" instead of the correct "should have", "should've", "would have" and "would've". Drives me crazy, especially since we're writing here people, not speaking. or you could just go with shoulda, woulda, a coulda....
John Cocktosten Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 LMAO...Hey "John Cocksmall", are you really giving a spelling lesson This thread is hilarious...Spelling and grammer lessons on a sports message board...classic, now I have seen it all That's a tough one. You should try a post using all 3 letter words.
birdog1960 Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 Uh, probably runs in the family. Can't escape genetics. Should be "extolling my wife and me" touche. never really got that rule. counterintuitive to me.
BillsBruce Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 And no more superfluous apostrophes! Please stop using them for making words plural! Now give me two more martinis (NOT martini's)! BTW, its is the possessive, it's is a contraction. Done. Out.
BillsBruce Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 And no more superfluous apostrophes! Please stop using them for making words plural! Now give me two more martinis (NOT martini's)! BTW, its is the possessive, it's is a contraction. Done. Out. Okay, one more... Why is it that ONLY "sportstalkers" use: 1.) As of late. ("Lately" isn't good enough for you?) 2.) The annoying plural thing. (i.e., "The Jim KellyS and the Carwell GardnerS and the Ryan MillerS of the the world...") There is ONLY ONE Jim Kelly! I feel better. Sorta...
San Jose Bills Fan Posted May 4, 2010 Posted May 4, 2010 I am not sure where I first heard or read "prolly". I have seen it quite a bit though, online anyway. I wonder if it is a WNY thing... thinking back I believe I have heard people shorten probably to "prolly". Prolly, even as an abbreviation is stupid. If you're going to shorten it, how about "Probly?" Probly is actually how many people pronounce it when shortening words. It makes no sense to eliminate the "B." As to Dev/Null's acquaintance who actually says "OMG," the guiding rule should be whether you're actually saving syllables or not, shouldn't it? Saying LMAO isn't really any shorter than saying "laugh my ass off" (or actually just laughing, in this case). Okay, one more... Why is it that ONLY "sportstalkers" use: 1.) As of late. ("Lately" isn't good enough for you?) 2.) The annoying plural thing. (i.e., "The Jim KellyS and the Carwell GardnerS and the Ryan MillerS of the the world...") There is ONLY ONE Jim Kelly! I feel better. Sorta... Sports announcers are the worst. When I was in broadcasting the guiding rule was economy of word. You're always trying to fit the most information in the smallest amount of time. So I would never use "prideful" when I could use proud...no matter how vogue it is. Also, these idiots can't say "he's going to be a successful quarterback someday." They are apparently now required to say "he's going to be successful at the quarterback position, someday." Again needlessly adding words, because most of these idiots don't really have anything to say. They're constantly filling with fluff to knock out segments.
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