• @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    If you don’t know the difference between “your” and “you’re”, you’re probably getting fired at some point anyway

    It’s not difficult and you could learn it in the space of a short walk

    It’d impress your boss

    • @[email protected]
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      202 months ago

      It’s annoying when people get pedantic about spelling on the internet, but at least you weren’t a massive, insufferable arsehole about it.

      • @[email protected]
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        -172 months ago

        True, but is it pedantic? The same people that complain they can’t find a job are the ones that make huge grammar mistakes in their applications or résumés.

        I wouldn’t hire someone who was too lazy to proofread over someone who wasn’t; would you? And then why should that rule not apply to your fellows on the internet?

        Sometimes if you don’t point out people’s mistakes, you’re actually hurting their future selves

        I think everyone nowadays is a bit too accepting of other people’s faults to try to seem a bit more morally superior themselves, without realising that they’re actually being abusive in the long term

        Anyway, I’m not actually serious here, I just wondered who would actually read this far

        • @SpaceNoodle
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          202 months ago

          I’ve found it’s more effective to be a little funny instead of being an enormous cunt.

        • @NocturnalMorning
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          72 months ago

          Nah, you’re just coming off as a giant asshole. Correcting your vs you’re on the internet is pedantic as fuck. Could have easily been an autocorrect or typo on their phone.

        • Hjalmar
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          72 months ago

          Please remember that everyone here isn’t a native English speaker and neither does everyone use English in professional writing.

          • @MutilationWave
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            22 months ago

            Only native speakers make the your you’re there their they’re mistakes.

              • @MutilationWave
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                12 months ago

                Because they’re just writing as they speak, whereas someone who learned English later in life should have a greater understanding that these are different words. I believe I’ve read about it before.

                Here’s a quick and dirty link to a discussion on the same topic.

                • Hjalmar
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                  22 months ago

                  Okay, guess that’s one explanatio n. It just doesn’t fit with what I see (as someone whose studied English for ~6 years). People in my class still confuse “you’re” and “your” quite frequently.

        • @acchariya
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          32 months ago

          I wouldn’t hire someone who was too lazy to proofread over someone who wasn’t; would you?

          Since “would you?” is incomplete, a comma would be correct here rather than a semicolon.