• @[email protected]
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    82 months ago

    No problem. Thank you for being receptive to my comment.

    Sometimes people get mad, and I don’t get why as I love to learn new things and it may help other people who may be non-native speakers to learn the quirks of English.

    • @Essence_of_Meh
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      82 months ago

      Here are some possible reasons for people getting mad if you’re really wondering why it happens:

      • unsolicited advice can make people feel stupid (you love to learn, not everyone does)
      • comments like yours can be used as a way of making fun of OP to disregard their point without actually interacting with it
      • being corrected on a slip up and not something you sincerely don’t know can be annoying (either towards the person correcting you or towards yourself for “not knowing something this simple”)
      • I don’t know about others but my school life never taught me how to deal with criticism, if you made a mistake you didn’t study properly and should go back to doing that instead of being explained what went wrong and why (this one might sound a worse than it really was but you get the point)

      I’m not saying you did any of those things and I’m right there with you on learning but the knee-jerk reactions often do have a reason behind them. There’s also the whole issue with how polarized social media is these days and the willingness to listen or admit to a mistake can be a difficult thing to stomach (“it’s a sign of weakness”).

      I hope that helps!

      • @[email protected]
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        42 months ago

        Thanks for this. It really does help to understand the reasons.

        I would say that I always try to preface my unsolicited advice to try and convey that I am not shitting on people or being condescending, as I did here. I do this so people can feel comfortable that I’m doing it to be nice and without any malice at all. I know you said I didn’t do any of these things, I just wanted to explain my thought process.

        • @Essence_of_Meh
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          32 months ago

          I get it. At the end of the day web is a vast space and people will have different experience functioning here, all we can do is try to convince others we’re genuine and do our thing. I’m just happy whenever a positive interactions like your and OP’s happen.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      Sorry, native speaker and language teacher here and I disagree. This is dialect dependent, but in my dialect at least, it’s the glottal stop at the beginning of a vowel sound that triggers it. Saying “an European” for me is like saying “an yellow.”

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        I’m confused as you say you don’t agree, but also using an European doesn’t sound right, which is right as it should be a European as European starts with a yoo sound rather than a vowel sound.

        It would be a yellow as yellow also starts with a consonant sound.

    • Snoopy
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      12 months ago

      Sadly i’m deaf, so i can’t use sound to correct myself 🥹😭

      I sh4uld meet an english deaf and usk them how do they manage those grammar rule. Their answer will be pretty fun :3