drugfukkdrockstar
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2003
- Messages
- 9,822
OH and another pet peeve is people not cleaning their own dishes at work and just leave food all int he sink. Fucking gross!!
Anyways, my pet peeve for the day is people antagonizing me for using "big" words. More accurately, accusing me of trying to show off. The fact of the matter is, I get pleasure from communicating more efficiently and if that means being economical with my diction at the expense of using polysyllabic words then so be it. u mad, dropouts?
Anyways, my pet peeve for the day is people antagonizing me for using "big" words. More accurately, accusing me of trying to show off. The fact of the matter is, I get pleasure from communicating more efficiently and if that means being economical with my diction at the expense of using polysyllabic words then so be it. u mad, dropouts?
if the comma was part of the text you are quoting, it should be inside the quotes. if not, it is not part of the quote and should be outside .
alasdair
^ Hahaha, I concur. Unfortunately people are that stupid.
Got another one for ya that's probably been mentioned in the 20 pages of this thread, but I feel it's important enough to reiterate:
People who say they "could care less." If you could care less, that means you still care! Saying you "could not care less" means that you do not care.
I've heard three people (two over the age of 30) in the past week say that they "could care less" and have corrected them on it--And they gave off the impression that they "could care less" about the correct phrase. 8)
"Bye" is pronounced exactly like one might think it is - "bye." Not "mmmmmmmbye." I don't get why people do this, but it's bleeping annoying.
Over the phone:
RL: "Thanks for helping me clear that up."
Service Rep: "Let us know if there is anything else we can do."
RL: "Thanks. Bye."
Service Rep: "mmmmmmmmmmmmmmbye."
Seriously, what's with the m's?
Where the hell is Fjones?
I've been guilty of pressing that button in the past, albeit rarely.
Anyways, my pet peeve for the day is people antagonizing me for using "big" words. More accurately, accusing me of trying to show off. The fact of the matter is, I get pleasure from communicating more efficiently and if that means being economical with my diction at the expense of using polysyllabic words then so be it. u mad, dropouts?
suffice? why didn't you say work instead of suffice?Fjones said:Never use a big word when a diminutive word will suffice.
suffice? why didn't you say work instead of suffice?
Sometimes the less common, possibly bigger word is just better by a more precise meaning or euphony or maybe the other word just seems worn out.
I was delayed by circumstances beyond my control. But upon returning to the thread and clicking the "go to first new post" button from my user CP, it brought me to page 34, skipping over three pages of new posts. What the fuck is that all about?
I have close to two dozen peeves to rant about; I just haven't had a chance to put them into words yet.
a short investigation suggests that, in common with many things, the rest of the world gets this and the u.s.a. does not.Fjones said:I just looked in several books and the comma is always inside the quotation marks. Either you are incorrect or we are talking about two different things.
Additional edit: Dude, What the fuck? We are talking about the same thing and you are just completely wrong.
a short investigation suggests that, in common with many things, the rest of the world gets this and the u.s.a. does not.
placing the comma logically inside or outside the quotes depending on whether the comma is part of the quote or not would seem to make sense to any reasonable observer. this approach seems to be known as 'the british standard' and, further, seems to be followed throughout the english speaking world, with the exception of the u.s.
in the u.s. the convention is to place the comma indisde the quotes regardless of whether it is part of the original quote. i know you are a big fan of logic, fjones, so i know you'll agree with me that this approach, logically, makes no sense whatsoever.
it's not that important for me to be right all the time but i know it's important to youalong with the rest of the u.s., on this matter, you are certainly 'wrong'.
alasdair
i might write:the constitution of the united states declares that "All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States," the composition of which is subsequently described.
i might writei was reading the note from john which said "i'll be back later", shortly before the phone rang.
all the reading that i have done on this subject - including webster's which is, i think, a reasonably well-respected source - confirms that the u.s. approaches this issue conventionally and the rest of the world uses the more logical approach.
let me ask you this. given that quote marks essentially say (in this context) "the bit inside the quote marks is from somewhere else", what is the logic in placing the comma inside the quote marks?
i have no problem with the u.s. settling on a different convention - why didn't they decide that the convention would be to always place the punctuation outside the quotes?
alasdair
i have no problem with the u.s. settling on a different convention - why didn't they decide that the convention would be to always place the punctuation outside the quotes?