@PugJesusM to A Comm for HistorymemesEnglish • 5 months agoHistorical photos are so fascinatingimagemessage-square5arrow-up192arrow-down14cross-posted to: [email protected]
arrow-up188arrow-down1imageHistorical photos are so fascinating@PugJesusM to A Comm for HistorymemesEnglish • 5 months agomessage-square5cross-posted to: [email protected]
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish10•5 months agoWhy does everyone write peaks when they mean peeks and peeks when they mean peaks. I see this far too consistently to believe the cause of it is anything less than a grand conspiracy.
minus-square@SendMePhotoslinkEnglish5•5 months agoOH! I was wondering wtf they were saying. Dude I didn’t get it. The other one that bothers me is “try and” instead of “try to.” for some reason it really gets to me.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish4•5 months agoHeaven help you if you ever run into a situation where “piqued” is contextually appropriate. Lose and loose as well…and cue/que/queue, and dozens of others
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish2•5 months agoThat’s pretty similar to: “I’ll go and do something“ instead of “I’ll go do something.“ I wonder if there are other examples.
minus-square@FlightyPenguinlinkEnglish2•5 months agoI love the Strunk and White style guide that says, “try and ‘try to’”. Very tongue-in-grammatical-cheek.
Why does everyone write peaks when they mean peeks and peeks when they mean peaks. I see this far too consistently to believe the cause of it is anything less than a grand conspiracy.
OH! I was wondering wtf they were saying. Dude I didn’t get it.
The other one that bothers me is “try and” instead of “try to.” for some reason it really gets to me.
Heaven help you if you ever run into a situation where “piqued” is contextually appropriate.
Lose and loose as well…and cue/que/queue, and dozens of others
That’s pretty similar to: “I’ll go and do something“ instead of “I’ll go do something.“ I wonder if there are other examples.
I love the Strunk and White style guide that says, “try and ‘try to’”. Very tongue-in-grammatical-cheek.