Grammar Vitamins

deafbajagal

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You + are = you're


Wrong: Your welcome.

Right: You're welcome.

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lose - when something is lost or gone
loose - not tight

Wrong: I will loose my keys.
Right: I will lose my keys.
 
I'm already aware of these. I know which is which and never got those confused.

I do know a lot of people who use "your" instead of "you're".
 
"ain't". I really hate that word. There is no such word as "ain't".
 
I really hate "I seen". It should be "I have seen" or "I had seen". I don't know why some people said that.
 
My hearing ex hubby constantly makes mistakes with the your and you're. LOL!
 
My grammar vitamin is

Right...I am excited to see u.
Wrong... I am exciting to see u


same goes for interested/interesting, disappointed/disappointing


I am interested in you.
I am disappointed in you

NOT

I am interesting in you
I am disappointing in u
 
My grammar vitamin is

here be dragons falls the shadow.....

no im kidding about that one

it's

Len and I went to the shop

not

me and len went da shop
 
"ain't". I really hate that word. There is no such word as "ain't".

§ 7. ain’t


Ain’t is a word that ain’t had it easy. It first appeared in English in 1778, evolving from an earlier form an’t, which arose almost a century earlier as a contraction of are not and am not. In fact, ain’t seems to have arisen at the tail end of an era that saw the introduction of a number of our most common contractions, including don’t and won’t. Ain’t and some of these other contractions came under criticism in the 1700s for being inelegant and low-class, even though they had actually been used by upper-class speakers. But while don’t and won’t eventually became perfectly acceptable at all levels of speech and writing, ain’t was to receive a barrage of criticism in the 19th century for having no set sequence of words from which it can be contracted and for being “a vulgarism,” that is, a term used by the lower classes. At the same time ain’t’s uses were multiplying to include is not, has not, and have not. It may be that these extended uses helped provoke the negative reaction. Whatever the case, the criticism of ain’t by usage commentators and teachers has not subsided, and the use of ain’t has come to be regarded as a mark of ignorance. Use it at your peril. 1
But despite all the attempts to ban it, ain’t continues to appear in the speech of ordinary folks. Even educated and upper-class speakers see that ain’t has no substitute in fixed expressions like Say it ain’t so, You ain’t just whistlin’ Dixie, and You ain’t seen nothin’ yet. 2
ain’t I? The stigmatization of ain’t leaves us with no happy alternative for use in first-person questions. The widely used aren’t I?, though illogical, was found acceptable for use in speech by a majority of the Usage Panel in an early survey, but in writing there is no alternative to saying am I not?

§ 7. ain’t. 1. Grammar. The American Heritage Book of English Usage. 1996
 
Cool, folks. Keep it up with the lessons! :)

Grammar Vitamin for today:

An = singular; not specific; used when a word begins with a vowel

A = singular; not specific; used when the word begins with a consonant

The= either singular or pluarl; usually specific, but doesn't have to be


Example:

An owl is flying.

A wizard is flying on his broom.

The teacher is nuts.

The teachers are nuts.
 
Cool, folks. Keep it up with the lessons! :)

Grammar Vitamin for today:

An = singular; not specific; used when a word begins with a vowel

A = singular; not specific; used when the word begins with a consonant

The= either singular or pluarl; usually specific, but doesn't have to be


Example:

An owl is flying.

A wizard is flying on his broom.

The teacher is nuts.

The teachers are nuts.

\That is what I am reviewing with my 4th graders this week! I gave them a writing assessment last week to see where they are at after being off for the summer. They forgot this rule so I am reviewing it with them. I wish their parents would make them write over the summer..it is frustrating how they forget by not using it all summer...grrr!

More grammar vitamins...


Noun/verb agreement


When to add a "s" to the verb..

The boy talks.

The boys talk.

The dogs bark.

The dog barks.
 
§ 7. ain’t


Ain’t is a word that ain’t had it easy. It first appeared in English in 1778, evolving from an earlier form an’t, which arose almost a century earlier as a contraction of are not and am not. In fact, ain’t seems to have arisen at the tail end of an era that saw the introduction of a number of our most common contractions, including don’t and won’t. Ain’t and some of these other contractions came under criticism in the 1700s for being inelegant and low-class, even though they had actually been used by upper-class speakers. But while don’t and won’t eventually became perfectly acceptable at all levels of speech and writing, ain’t was to receive a barrage of criticism in the 19th century for having no set sequence of words from which it can be contracted and for being “a vulgarism,” that is, a term used by the lower classes. At the same time ain’t’s uses were multiplying to include is not, has not, and have not. It may be that these extended uses helped provoke the negative reaction. Whatever the case, the criticism of ain’t by usage commentators and teachers has not subsided, and the use of ain’t has come to be regarded as a mark of ignorance. Use it at your peril. 1
But despite all the attempts to ban it, ain’t continues to appear in the speech of ordinary folks. Even educated and upper-class speakers see that ain’t has no substitute in fixed expressions like Say it ain’t so, You ain’t just whistlin’ Dixie, and You ain’t seen nothin’ yet. 2
ain’t I? The stigmatization of ain’t leaves us with no happy alternative for use in first-person questions. The widely used aren’t I?, though illogical, was found acceptable for use in speech by a majority of the Usage Panel in an early survey, but in writing there is no alternative to saying am I not?

§ 7. ain’t. 1. Grammar. The American Heritage Book of English Usage. 1996

If its not Oxford English Dictionary, it "ain't" worth citing.
 
"ain't". I really hate that word. There is no such word as "ain't".

You're wrong. You obviously don't know what you are talking about. I have a Masters in English; it has been used so much, so often that it has become accepted.

I've been following your posts, Dave. You're obviously not a well-informed person.
 
Cool, folks. Keep it up with the lessons! :)

Grammar Vitamin for today:

An = singular; not specific; used when a word begins with a vowel

A = singular; not specific; used when the word begins with a consonant

The= either singular or pluarl; usually specific, but doesn't have to be


Example:

An owl is flying.

A wizard is flying on his broom.

The teacher is nuts.

The teachers are nuts.
Using the prevowel indefinite article 'an' in from of 'h' words. | Antimoon Forum source for quote below
The "formal" rule is:
- when an h-word is stressed on the first syllable ("hat", "heritage"), "a" has to be used over "an"
- when an h-word is not stressed on the first syllable ("historic", "heroic", "horrendous"), then either "a" or "an" can both be used

This is why "an historic..." is acceptable but "an hat" is not.

But you're right, it does sound rather pompous to use "an" before an h-word.
 
Using the prevowel indefinite article 'an' in from of 'h' words. | Antimoon Forum source for quote below
The "formal" rule is:
- when an h-word is stressed on the first syllable ("hat", "heritage"), "a" has to be used over "an"
- when an h-word is not stressed on the first syllable ("historic", "heroic", "horrendous"), then either "a" or "an" can both be used

This is why "an historic..." is acceptable but "an hat" is not.

But you're right, it does sound rather pompous to use "an" before an h-word.

You're right about this - and it was a challenge teaching deaf kids (and even HoH kids) about this little exception. ;) Thank goodness it is flexible and allows us to use either "a" or "an." Lol. Thanks for sharing, Bot.
 
§ 7. ain’t


Ain’t is a word that ain’t had it easy. It first appeared in English in 1778, evolving from an earlier form an’t, which arose almost a century earlier as a contraction of are not and am not. In fact, ain’t seems to have arisen at the tail end of an era that saw the introduction of a number of our most common contractions, including don’t and won’t. Ain’t and some of these other contractions came under criticism in the 1700s for being inelegant and low-class, even though they had actually been used by upper-class speakers. But while don’t and won’t eventually became perfectly acceptable at all levels of speech and writing, ain’t was to receive a barrage of criticism in the 19th century for having no set sequence of words from which it can be contracted and for being “a vulgarism,” that is, a term used by the lower classes. At the same time ain’t’s uses were multiplying to include is not, has not, and have not. It may be that these extended uses helped provoke the negative reaction. Whatever the case, the criticism of ain’t by usage commentators and teachers has not subsided, and the use of ain’t has come to be regarded as a mark of ignorance. Use it at your peril. 1
But despite all the attempts to ban it, ain’t continues to appear in the speech of ordinary folks. Even educated and upper-class speakers see that ain’t has no substitute in fixed expressions like Say it ain’t so, You ain’t just whistlin’ Dixie, and You ain’t seen nothin’ yet. 2
ain’t I? The stigmatization of ain’t leaves us with no happy alternative for use in first-person questions. The widely used aren’t I?, though illogical, was found acceptable for use in speech by a majority of the Usage Panel in an early survey, but in writing there is no alternative to saying am I not?

§ 7. ain’t. 1. Grammar. The American Heritage Book of English Usage. 1996

Thanks for the link. A good reminder that just because it is informal doesn't mean it is grammatically incorrect. :)
 
\That is what I am reviewing with my 4th graders this week! I gave them a writing assessment last week to see where they are at after being off for the summer. They forgot this rule so I am reviewing it with them. I wish their parents would make them write over the summer..it is frustrating how they forget by not using it all summer...grrr!

More grammar vitamins...


Noun/verb agreement


When to add a "s" to the verb..

The boy talks.

The boys talk.

The dogs bark.

The dog barks.


I agree - it is so frustrating when they do not write/read all summer...then they come to school...it is almost as if we have to start all over again. What a waste of our time. Grrrrrr.
 
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