Originally posted by vinteuil
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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They're both participles, used adjectivally. To that extent, they appear to be grammatically the same.
The objection of the hidebound costive grammaticopedant to this is that to head is intransitive; we know this because the form he is heading cannot be followed by a direct object (any more than the form he is sitting can).
But (so the argument goes) the verb to be + past participle forms the passive. And intransitive verbs, having no direct object, can't be passive. That's why people throw up their hands in horror at the form he was sat.
Bound is different from headed because the rest of the verb it comes from withered away a long time ago, leaving only this single adjectival form used descriptively.
(I'm just explaining Scotty's objection rather better than he's managed himself - I wouldn't want anyone to think I agreed with it!)
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... but why ca'n't past participles be used adjectivally, regardless of their origins in a transitive or intransitive verb?
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... but why ca'n't past participles be used adjectivally, regardless of their origins in a transitive or intransitive verb?
This one, though, hasn't moved very far, and the active form exists alongside it. So some people mind a lot.
What is your opinion of he was sat, may I ask?
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Originally posted by jean View PostWhat is your opinion of he was sat, may I ask?
OED quote from Ramsbotham's Lancashire Rhymes: At th' eend o' th' day..aw'm sat at whoam.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 cloughie View PostI would ask the question 'who sat him?'
If this isn't taking the discussion ever closer to losing will to live territory, it must be driving it towards Pedantry thread territory as I suggested previously; what do you think, FF? The putting of teeth on edge seems some time ago to have vanished into thin air, to be replaced by esoteric dicussions of certain finer points of English grammar and aspects of its history...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIf this isn't taking the discussion ever closer to losing will to live territory, it must be driving it towards Pedantry thread territory as I suggested previously; what do you think, FF? The putting of teeth on edge seems some time ago to have vanished into thin air, to be replaced by esoteric dicussions of certain finer points of English grammar and aspects of its history...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 cloughie View PostI would ask the question 'who sat him?'
Odd perhaps, because on the Pedantry thread a poster recently thought that people had problems with lie/lay because
Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post...One problem is not understanding what transitive and intransitive mean.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe problem, Mr Hinton, is that there is an apparent overlap, with Pedants regularly having their teeth set on edge, or sat on hedge, by incorrect, perceived incorrect, non-standard English-as-she-is-spoke-where-I-live-and-how-I-speak-it, patently wrong, possibly wrong, sporadically-and-here-and-there wrong, peculiar, particular and downright laughable usages.
On a related topic, mightn't your "English-as-she-is-spoke..." and P. G.'s "mother country" (and perhaps "mother tongue") risk being considered less than politically correct? Whilst they don't exactly set my teeth on edge, I do not seek to espouse pedantry by asking...
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