• @[email protected]
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    1651 year ago

    Grammar aside, it’s an odd choice to fill up half the page with 747s if you want to showcase the variety of commercial passenger airplanes.

    • @HappycamperNZ
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      651 year ago

      I’m more annoyed at the lack of anything prop.

      Not everything is a international long haul.

  • @[email protected]
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    941 year ago

    It genuinely took me a while to see what was wrong with it, my brain was autocorrecting it

  • @[email protected]
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    831 year ago

    See, I thought it was mildly infuriating because the images aren’t “many types of airplanes”, they’re only a few types of airplanes repeated at different sizes or different angles.

    • Footnote2669
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      71 year ago

      I read „there are” until I saw this comment lol brain got TOO automatic

  • Daniel
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    391 year ago

    My brain autocorrected this for me, and I was confused why you were posting it at first.

    This reminds me, there is a thing that the human mind can read horribly spelled words — as long as the general idea of it is the same (most of the time the end and beginning). I would try to find an example, but it’s late and my ability to form proper search queries os diminished.

  • @[email protected]
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    281 year ago

    Disregarding the bad grammar, the picture shows a terrible variety of airplanes. They’re all some sort of commercial passenger jet.

    It’s like saying, “there’s so many kinds of motorcycles!” while showing only various Harleys. Let’s just ignore the dirt bikes, sport bikes, and everything in between.

    • @waigl
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      Using “they” when you haven’t yet established the group you are referring to in context feels weird and kinda wrong, especially if it’s about a group of inanimate objects. It really looks like the word should have been “there”, but they just mistyped and then didn’t catch the error in the editing process or didn’t bother to correct it.

      That’s what I think is wrong here. I’m not 100% sure that this grammatically wrong, but it sure feels like it. Might depend on what the page before this one said.

      • LazaroFilmOP
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        121 year ago

        It’s in a book for 5 years old to learn to read. It’s supposed to be simple words in simple sentences. This is not it.

      • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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        01 year ago

        This is the only post in the entire thread attempting to parse the grammar.

        It feels wrong because as you pointed out, as text, the pronoun “they” has no antecedent. Who are they?

        But there is a picture, too. That’s them!

        It’s not just type, it’s typography. You have to analyze the grammar of something like one page of a picture book or a movie poster or advert in its context.

    • LazaroFilmOP
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      71 year ago

      Should be “There”

  • @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    Is the issue that all the plains are basically the same kind of wide and narrow-body passenger jets? Like there is hardly any variety in the images?

  • @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    The issue is on both pages. Lack of knowledge of English on one, and lazy copy/pasta of similar airplanes on the other.

  • @not_that_guy05
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    181 year ago

    This ladies and gentlemen is an example of people using ai to make kid books. It’s a big thing right now and easy money but could have consequence if kids start reading these at a young age.

    • @francisfordpoopola
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      291 year ago

      Don’t try to redirect stupidity from people to computers. We’re more than capable of doing stupid things without the help of our AI overlords.

    • @Ddhuud
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      251 year ago

      No. AI wouldn’t mess up like that. It could spew other kinds of shit, but with excellent syntax. It’s far more likely for humans to make mistakes like that.

    • Square Singer
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      41 year ago

      This ladies and gentlemen is an example of people using ai to make kid books. It’s a big thing right now and easy money but could have consequence if kids start reading these they at a young age.

      FTFY

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      The good thing is: This type of book is read by parents to their 1-3 year old kids. You show the pictures and can filter weird sentences. This is not a book a 9 year old is going to read 😉

    • @Mr_Blott
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      171 year ago

      No, “airplane” is simplified English, for simpletons

      “Aeroplane” is fancypants English

      • @TheGrandNagus
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        1 year ago

        …no. Non-US English speakers absolutely do not say gaol instead of jail lmao and haven’t for a loooooong time.

        • @Mr_Blott
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          61 year ago

          How do you know we’re not secretly saying “gaol” but you’re hearing it as “jail”?

      • Herbal Gamer
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        21 year ago

        downvotes of those that don’t know that’s actually a word.

        • @TheGrandNagus
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          -31 year ago

          It’s an archaic word that pretty much fell out of usage in the 1800s. People don’t say it. It’s a word in very much the same way forsooth or something is.

          That’s why I downvoted.

          • @Mr_Blott
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            21 year ago

            Fucksake man, can you genuinely not tell when someone is poking fun at you? Are you one of these types that need the /s, like the seppos do? 😂

            • @TheGrandNagus
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              1 year ago

              They were not being sarcastic.

              This is a common misconception from Americans who presumably just read some 300 year old poem or book in their English literature lessons and assume everybody still writes like that.

              • @Mr_Blott
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                21 year ago

                They were definitely being tongue in cheek. No need to get your skidmarked knickers in a twist over a flippant comment.

                Might want to work on your reading comprehension old chap

                • @TheGrandNagus
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                  01 year ago

                  No they weren’t, get your eyes checked, child.

          • Herbal Gamer
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            -11 year ago

            Recently saw Gaolor being played on Cats does Countdown so I think it counts.

  • Camelbeard
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    161 year ago

    They are so many good kind of AI written books nowdays

    • LazaroFilmOP
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      51 year ago

      Funny enough, I bet an Ai would not make that mistake.

      • Camelbeard
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        11 year ago

        Just like a human it really depends on what you feed your AI as training data.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Funny that as a non-native I’m less likely to make such a mistake than natives. At some point I had to learn the basics or something. Not that I don’t make mistakes

    • LazaroFilmOP
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      101 year ago

      Same here I’m French native. The there their they’re thing doesn’t affect me.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        I’ve always been a native English speaker, but my first 11 years of education weren’t in the U.S. I also don’t have an issue with: their, there, and they’re.

        Affect and effect were tough for me, though. I still have to think about it for a moment

        And slightly off topic, I still can’t tell the difference between pansexual and bisexual. Each time I feel like I have a decent internal definition someone comes along to inform me that I’ve got it wrong

        • LazaroFilmOP
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          11 year ago

          Affect: action impacts you Effect: your action has an impact Bisexual: you like boys and girls Pansexual: you like boys, girls, boys that are girls, girls that are boys, people that identify as themselves…

  • Melllvar
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    151 year ago

    Probably went like: There are->There’re->They’re->They are