trysail
Catch Me Who Can
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PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT ( Part I )
The NPR Grammar Hall of Shame
http://www.npr.org/2014/12/30/372495062/the-npr-grammar-hall-of-shame-opens-with-i-and-me
We asked for nominations for "most misused word or phrase," and they came pouring in. Weekend Edition listeners and NPR.org readers have many gripes about the grammar gaffes they see and hear every day.
From nearly 450 story comments, 500 emails and more than 900 Facebook posts we received in December, we identified 275 separate nominees. Here's a top-10 countdown of the most frequently mentioned:
10. Not answering "thank you" with "you're welcome." This one's probably more about etiquette than grammar. But responses such as "no problem," "sure" or "thank you" go against what many in the NPR audience say were taught.
9. Saying someone "graduated college" instead of "graduated from college." A college graduates a student, not the other way around. The "from" makes a big difference.
8. The chronic misuse of "lay" and "lie." Remember, you lie down to sleep after laying your book on the bedside table. Also, tell the dog to "lie down" and sing "Lie Down Sally."
7. Referring to anything as "very unique." Either it's unique or it's not.
6. Claiming something "begs the question." You almost always mean it "raises the question." Aristotle would not know what you are talking about.
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