• @[email protected]
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    -171 month 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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      201 month ago

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

    • Hjalmar
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      71 month 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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        21 month ago

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

          • @MutilationWave
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            11 month 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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              21 month 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.

    • @NocturnalMorning
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      71 month 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.

    • @acchariya
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      31 month 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.