Originally posted by ahinton
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by jean View Poston the Pedantry thread a poster recently thought that people had problems with lie/lay because "one problem is not understanding what transitive and intransitive mean"
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostYes, I can understand that in terms of how it might make it difficult to transfer particular posts to this thread to the Pedantry one, so I wonder whether you might consider there to be sufficient commonality in principle between the two - i.e. between one about phrases and words that bother people and another dealing with pedantry of which at least a fair proportion seems to centre around spoken and written issues (including idioms and grammatical niceties); what say you about the possibility of a wholesale merger (which would presumably be easier than picking of posts one at a time to move elsehere)?
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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Originally posted by jean View PostBut any discussion of "the putting of teeth on edge" is no fun at all without "esoteric dicussions of certain finer points of English grammar and aspects of its history"
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBy definition, a vote would have to be taken on the Pedantry thread on a motion to amalgamate, surely?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt's behind you!!!
Anyway, one thing is for certain in this otherwise uncertain demi-monde of tooth-dislodging pedantry and that's that it's a woman's right to decide whether or not to merge the threads...
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Originally posted by jean View PostIt's true that this thread started with posters just listing the words and phrases that upset them.
But qute early on there was this:
And after that, well, what happened was bound to happen...
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post...to which I am sorely tempted to answer, in true ISIHAC "Uxbridge English Dictionary" tradition, that "transtive" is a term applied to certain verbs that possess the characteristics of an action verb expressing an activity such as kick, want, paint, write, eat, clean, etc. that must have a direct object, i.e something or someone who receives the action of the verb, whereas "intransitive" is a Tory supporter in a van. It sounds better when relayed deadpan by Jack Dee, believe me...
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostJust to be pedantic for a moment ... "eat", "paint" and "write" do not need an object and are often used intransitively. He eats like an animal. He writes for a living. She paints as a hobby. Even "kick": The baby was kicking in the womb. He kicked in the finishing straight. That horse kicks. He was dragged out kicking and screaming.
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