Originally posted by gurnemanz
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Pedants' Paradise
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This is a sticky topic.
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Originally posted by jean View PostI don't think anyone can look tiresome, even to the Mail! Tiresomeness surely has to be a function of behaviour.
If you google the phrase, you are taken to an article containing 'Obama was captured looking tiresome and in heavy contemplation as ...'
But when you click on to the actual article, you find it's been changed to 'Obama was captured looking tired and in heavy contemplation as...'
So, a mistake, I think.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostAt school were told never (ne'er?) to use contractions in written English. They would be underlined in red.
But I don't think we would have been expected to avoid contractions as budding playwrights, say, or novelists using dialogue. Poets have always been a law unto themselves:
Aye, back at Leady-Day, you know,
I come vrom Gullybrook to Stowe ;
At Leady-Day I took my pack
O' rottletraps, an' turn'd my back
Upon the weather-beaten door,
That had a-screen'd, so long avore,
The mwost that thease zide o' the greave,
I'd live to have, or die to seave !It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI wasn't suggesting it would be correct! Just the way the Mail's collective mind might work when on automatic pilot.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThe Mail has a "collective mind"? Wow! I'd not realised that. I've never even been especially convinced that it knows what an automatic pilot is...It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostOh, I think there's a mind behind it that knows exactly what it's doing
Ah, a "collective" mind; I see - something that one might think to equate to the garbage or recycling that one puts out every alternate week in the faint hope of "collection", then. OK; understood (I think).
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rider: I have just written "I did learn". Why is this a common usage (why not useage?) when "I learned (or learnt?)" would be sufficient.
further rider: why did not you all choose to speak French all those hundreds of years ago? Please do not reply, I know why, it was a rhetorical question. How I long for the clarity of Proust. (That was a joke. I think.)
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View Postrider: I have just written "I did learn". Why is this a common usage...when "I learned (or learnt?)" would be sufficient.
further rider: why did not you all choose to speak French all those hundreds of years ago?
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View Postfurther rider: why did not you all choose to speak French all those hundreds of years ago? Please do not reply, I know why, it was a rhetorical question. How I long for the clarity of Proust. (That was a joke. I think.)
(I hope that I don't need to add a "heavy irony" emoticon?!)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by jean View PostYou said the article was 'difficult to unpick', so you want to emphasise that you did learn something from it, as we might well have concluded that you didn't.
We'd use the contracted form didn't you, but uncontracted, we'd say did you not (though the all complicateds matters).
The point you highlight was caused by carelessness; I ought not (should not) post late in the evening.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Postthe language of the previous sets of invaders was far more expressive and eloquent.
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostThe previous royal house were cousins of the second set, who had settled in Normandie. ("Nor" is a clue). One set of foreign rulers replaced a previous set of foreign rulers, so why bother resisting if you were a landless peasant?
Then, when the Angevin Plantagenets started having quarrels with their neighbours in France, and there was that century-long firm and frank sharing of views, the aristocracy decided that they may as well just make the official language the one that most of them had been speaking for much/most of the time anyway!
The landless peasants' contact with their new masters was sporadic, in comparison with their everyday conversations and communications; and the[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI think the "'Nor' is a clue" is significant: the Normans were basically a very successful offshoot of the Vikings - one that spread widely around Europe, reaching parts of Russia and the Mediterranean. They had a habit of vicious conquering followed by assimilation of local customs and habits - hence William the Bastard's family had been French-speakers for generations when he defeated the Saxon Harold Godwinson. The Normans then took (and gave) great pains to conquer England - devoting much brutality to the North in particular (the old Danegeld regions, so former Viking vs former Viking) - taking land for themselves and subsequently marrying into the old Saxon families. It was easier for the new masters (whose wives - and, of course, mothers: they would have heard lullabies in English - were English-speakers) to learn to address their new subjects in their own language, keeping French for communicating amongst each other.
Then, when the Angevin Plantagenets started having quarrels with their neighbours in France, and there was that century-long firm and frank sharing of views, the aristocracy decided that they may as well just make the official language the one that most of them had been speaking for much/most of the time anyway!
The landless peasants' contact with their new masters was sporadic, in comparison with their everyday conversations and communications; and the
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post...you were saying?...
" ... and the new masters found it quicker/easier to issue orders in the (at first) fragments of English vocabulary they knew in those contacts."[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post- I don't know what happened there! (It looks like I had a moment of Existential Crisis!) I had typed (and must somehow have deleted) something along the lines of ...
" ... and the new masters found it quicker/easier to issue orders in the (at first) fragments of English vocabulary they knew in those contacts."
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