Originally posted by Pulcinella
View Post
Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by PulcinellaBut would you mind being stood up in the pub?
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostA close colleague and fellow linguist for many years used it all the time. Admittedly, he was from the North of Enlgand where I think it is standard colloquial usage. I also don't mind "We were sat in the pub ..."
As someone who has lived in northern England for 66 years of my life, I've never found it acceptable. And why blame Northerners? It's rife in Devon too. It's a simple misunderstanding of the present/past continuous tense.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI've never greatly objected to that. A close colleague and fellow linguist for many years used it all the time. Admittedly, he was from the North of Enlgand where I think it is standard colloquial usage. I also don't mind "We were sat in the pub ..."
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
If we were sat in the pub, we would have been placed there by someone else.
As someone who has lived in northern England for 66 years of my life, I've never found it acceptable. And why blame Northerners? It's rife in Devon too. It's a simple misunderstanding of the present/past continuous tense.
I have never really thought about the syntax of all this before (and should probably get out more but is raining outside) ....
"They sat us in the corner of the pub", as referred to above uses "sit" as a transitive verb with a direct object. "They seated us" is more usual as in "Please wait to be seated".
Being a transitive verb, it can have a passive form:
"We were sat in the corner of the pub". (same as We were placed ...")
This sentence, "We were sat in the corner of the pub" can have another meaning (the controversial one) and is based on a different underlying syntactic structure. I would see this as not actually a form of the verb "to sit" at all, but as the verb "to be" followed by a past participle used in an adverbial phrase, similar to: "He was lost in thought". "He was crouched over the handlebars".
You can find subtly distinct pairs: "She is sitting on the throne" (ie actually doing it at this moment) versus "She is sat on the throne" (the contentious usage) which would suggest she is already in position, having sat there previously.
"The bird was perched on a twig" is not quite the same as "The bird was perching on a twig"), the former denoting what the bird has already done and the latter what it was doing at that moment.
I rest my case.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostAnyway, his standing is reduced.
But in the meantime, it got quoted!
I won't bother posting it again, but in case anyone's trying to find it I thought I'd explain where it went.
My additional comment was to the effect that I'd even heard the expression 'sat sitting' occasionally, as you might hear 'I was sat reading the newspaper and smoking a pipe when.....'
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by teamsaint View Post“that”.
.
One thing I keep hearing from the western side of the Atlantic is the phrase “I could give a damn” (or other 4 letter alternative ), when surely what the speaker means is “I couldn’t give a .....”
Oh and I continue to at the regular “the thing is, is that...” or similar, not as a stutter or hesitation but as if “thing is” were a composite noun
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Comment
-
Comment