To be fair not everyone thinks about using the search function (and most of the time when people say something is common knowledge or common sense, it isn't).Sonic Doctor said:People here shouldn't have to do the work of people that don't use the search function. It is basic internet knowledge that most sites have a search function. It takes all of a minute to find it on here. So with common knowledge people should just use the search function, to find a thread that poses a question they are thinking about and then post in it instead of making a copy that clutters up the forum.
Also, as I stated before, posting on a thread about a subject that already has several pages tends to result in your post getting overlooked and ignored (which to a lot of people defeats the point of posting in the first place) so it isn't entirely unjustified from a poster's point of view to just say 'fuck it' to the search bar.
Oh Jesus H. Christ you had to go and write an essay...fine. Let me grab a chair so I can hear your story.That's all fine and dandy in fairytale land, but that doesn't work in the real world.
Well that is all fine and good in College and University essays and projects because for the most part they do tend to award extra marks for presentaion (in other words, in scenarios like that where you're expecting your work to be evaluated to a high or professional standard then it goes without saying that you put just as much effort into the presentation of your writing as you do the actual content).First off, I'm taking into consideration that the OP is 19 or 20 years old, from his profile.
Because of that I'll looking at this from an adult prospective. If one doesn't have good communications skill, living in the real world will be quite a chore. Considering what I have been told by every single English professor that I had in college, if someone has a question they answered or has a point to make in an argument, people in the real world aren't going to take what that person says seriously if he or she can't communicate clearly with proper grammar and spelling.
Someone asking a question on an informal internet forum isn't exactly a linguistics dissertaion so obviously you should adjust your expectations accordingly (if I was writing my English Language exam again then I would of course triple check to make sure that all my spellings were correct and that I had correct use of punctuation but if I'm just talking to one of my friends online then I don't even bother with capitals or any punctuation).
Again, note how the OP was informally asking us here to just converse with him and answer a simple question, not to provide a detailed manuscript for a piece analyising the British lexicon.If I had submitted something that was as badly written as what the OP wrote, my professors probably wouldn't have even graded it, they would have probably given me a zero or if they were feeling nice, they would have given me until the end of the day or the next day to fix it and turn it back in.
You need to be able to adjust your expectations based on the situation (a skill that's just as important as being able to use grammar and spelling correctly, especially in social situations).
That would be like saying that I should use the same manner of speech and vocabulary when talking to my best friend, my girlfriend, my doctor and my local member of parliment (in other words, that's ridiculous in practice and in theory). I understand the need to be clear and understandable (that's a different issue) but proverbially crucifying someone because what they've written is a bit rough around the edges in an otherwise informal context I would say is having unrealistic expectations (and potentially a sign of needing one's head surgically removed from the dark depths of their rear end).Even if you pull the whole it is just an internet post thing, my professors always stressed that even in personal conversations with random people or friends or family, proper grammar is still as important as it is in a professional setting. If people have a hard time reading what a person writes, they are going to have a hard time understanding the person and in most cases and rightly so, not care about what the person says since the person didn't care about communicating clearly.
Well that's good for you but as someone who frequently has to lend assistance to others with their spelling and grammar I can tell you that this is the sort of thing that tends not to occur to most people unless they're writing something of vital importance or formality. Otherwise people tend not to get very anal over this provided that the intended recipient can understand what's being said (again, the message itself is more important than the presentation), if I was to drill and abuse the people I help over their spelling and grammatical mistakes then I guarentee you that not only would it not help them but it would probably reduce the odds of them seeking help (who wants to ask an arsehole for help?) and just make me come across as a stuck up and arrogant cockmuncher.Even if the OP's browser doesn't have a spell-checker, he could have at least opened his word processor and checked what he wrote. Any time I misspell a word and my browser doesn't know what I'm spelling, I either open Word and see what it says, or I pull up Google and let it decipher what I'm trying to spell. In the end, if by some impossible odds that fails, I don't just leave the word misspelled, I choose a different word that means the same or I rephrase what I was saying.
Speaking of cockmunchers, I would like to make a sidenote about the whole 'swearing is a sign of a limited vocabulary' thing (sorry for the derailment here), how exactly is having more words under my command (and more importantly, the willingness to use them) limiting my vocabulary?
That never made sense to me.
It was the fact that I was so often called upon to help others that taught me how to write and spell properly, as you can probably see from what I've written (not just here but across many threads and other discussions) I possess very good spelling, grammar and a wide vocabulary.College made me appreciate using proper grammar and spelling. My professors and even I now would say that ideas like yours that only the opinion and/or idea of what is written is important are the reasons why every year new college prospects that enter their freshman year seem like they have had absolutely no teaching in proper writing.
But I bet you wouldn't believe me if I told you that despite my command and mastery of the English language that my actual handwriting is bloody terrible (I liken it to 'a six year old with only a finger and a thumb on each hand') and is very hard to read, now would my awful handwriting suddenly mean that anything I write posesses no value?
Would you and your professors, despite my clarity and ability to structure my arguements, turn their nose up at me and ignore what I had to say because my C's look like E's and my O's look like A's?
If so, then I hate to break it to you, but you and your professors are a bunch of narrow minded idiots.
Oh no...it can't be...HYPERBOLE ALERT! HYPERBOLE ALERT! HOLY SHIT! BATTLE STATIONS, EVERYONE! GET THE WOMEN AND CHILDREN OUT FIRST! RALLY THE TROOPS! TO THE WALLS!Heck, ideas like yours almost brought about the destruction of proper English learning a few years ago.
I almost feel like you called me a Communist or a Heretic or something like that.
Again, I don't disagree with the notion of teaching correct English in schools (that is partly what they're there for after all) so I agree that an idea like that does sound counter-intuitive and counter-productive.I remember hearing about some crazy idea that some grade school teachers wanted to put into effect. The plan/idea was called Whole English, basically what it was is that if a kid misspelled a word but it still sounded like the word they were trying to spell, it would be counted right.
That is utter bullshit, that would mean that if such a thing was in place when I was in first grade, when I had a brain lapse and spelled "of" as "uv", it would have been counted right and possibly from then on I would have been misspelling "of" as "uv". The OP's spelling of "thread" as "thred", would have been counted right as well.
But that isn't what I was argueing.
We were reminded not to use Text speech in our classes but as a general rule even though a lot of the people in my class were frequent texters who obviously used text speech a lot in their day-to-day lives they mostly all passed with C's and above (I got a B myself). You're speaking about not crucifying people over their writing as if it's the Red Scare ('if we even tolerate the wrong use of the word 'there' then I tell ya...our grandaughters will be standing naked on street corners selling crack and talking in grunts and clicks!'), society is not going to Hell on an express elevator and even if it was, I doubt it would be because someone forgot to use capitals and spell check their forum post.We can't have such ignorance in our education system or even let it by in in our everyday lives. Because if we let what the OP writes slide as okay. Everybody eventually will start believing that they can write anyway they want and then all communication will break down.
Things like text speak are already seeping into the English language and corrupting people and hurting their communication and academic standing. I remember one of my English professors, she was practically banging her head against the front desk in the classroom when I came in. I asked her what the problem was and she said that practically half her freshman composition class was using text speak in a majority of their papers and they weren't doing it as a joke. The students literally thought it would be accepted in college, since the everyday texting world finds it acceptable. That thought just made me think less of the world, at least of the teachers those kids must of had in high school if they let that stuff get by.
I'm sure that in order to just be accepted into a College or University that you have to posess a certain level of literacy in my College we actually had to do a test to check that we could write and count to an adult l,evel, those who failed would be given extra support to try and help them catch up, and that's before we get to the fact that all of my courses required C's and above in Maths and English.
Have you ever considered the possability that maybe the professor you spoke to was maybe (gasp) exaggerating? (my teachers joked about terrible and nightmarish students to us all the time although we were apparantly savvey enough to see that it was just meant as light hearted humour)
So no, I still don't think you have a point and wouldn't be too suprised if you are one of those people who seems to have an image built up of themselves being some enlightened beacon of the last hope for civilised society (I'm sorry but the phrase 'Such is needed to protect the integrity of proper communication.' makes you sound like one of the old, white haired men who always shake an angry fist at them damned pokemans and Hip-Hop albums).So no, people here aren't in the wrong by criticizing the OP about his grammar and spelling. Such is needed to protect the integrity of proper communication.