
BTW, use "an" before words beginning with vowels and "a" before words beginning with consonants - except in certain circumstances such as words beginning with "h" OR does 2+2 no longer equal 4?
Now comes the next question/s....

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Hmmmm..... You're a pretty smart guyBunkins wrote:I'm all for spell check. I just type things as I think them, I'm a grease monkey, writing is not something I do very often.If it wasn't for forum's I'd probably never write anything.. I take that back, I do write out invoices and such, but nothing that really "matters"..
The only things I dislike are typing in cap locks, I wont even read a post typed that way. Not using period's or starting each sentence with a capital letter. Paragraphs are nice too.. As far as how words are used, even used in the wrong context, I know what someone is trying to say. If I can easily read it, it's all good with me..
TDDude wrote:In digital audio, it's called Error Correction. I guess the human brain can do the same thing.Wildscar wrote:but the czary prat is I bet ylal can slitl raed tihs eevn thguoht all the ltertres are jblmued anourd in the wdros.
atxgun wrote:
kthxbai, ttyl
Yaeh Waht he siad.atxgun wrote:TDDude wrote:In digital audio, it's called Error Correction. I guess the human brain can do the same thing.Wildscar wrote:but the czary prat is I bet ylal can slitl raed tihs eevn thguoht all the ltertres are jblmued anourd in the wdros.
The imrpotnat tihng is taht the frsit and lsat ltetres are crorrcet
I think *these* are used in some computer applications because "these" don't get processed correctly.DoubleJ wrote:what about using *these* to emphasize? cracks me up, so I use'em.
For car dealers, it should be "BEST" deals.Fosforos wrote:I loathe the use of quotation marks for emphasis. But they do give me a chuckle pretty often. It just makes everything they say sound ironic.
Local car dealer had a billboard touting:
The BEST "deals".
magicglock wrote:The real problem is that words like irregardless are not proper but so frequently used that society has made them generally accepted. I thought I heard at one point recently that irregardless was officially accepted and placed in a new dictionary. Maybe I am wrong but if we as a society have found it easier to accept than teach proper english, that is a tragedy. I am not perfect in the area of grammar and spelling but leaps and bounds above what I see in new front line employees. Seems that the schools are more interested in how the child feels than what they are learning.