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10 questions on grammar
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-22512744
Can you punctuate better than the average child? :idc: I got 9/10. |
7/10
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Was "gerund" a problem ..... :suspect: |
I got the first 3 wrong so I gave up. This is for British English anyway so it's probably racist against Americans.
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6/10
better than the thought lawl |
6/10. But the point is that such tests on grammar are ridiculous anyway. As I was doing that quiz, those sentences which were wrong were perfectly understandable anyway. Linguistic change and the context of new generations in relation to grammar is that which causes these discrepancies. No-one is wrong, only different.
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The sibling one was ****ing ridiculous, and would never ever be said by anyone. :idc:
I got 8 correct, missing that and the last one. |
2/10
0-3: Colon confusenik |
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Surely, it's only linguistic change in the context of a new generation being different, causing discrepancies ..... :shrug: |
I got 8/10 although I will admit a couple of those were lucky guesses :laugh:
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3/10 oops
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It suggests to me that maybe the rules are becoming more archaic and are simply on the way out. I think we should be worrying more about the testing obsession that's become a part of our schooling system, rather than if a child knows whether to use 'may' or 'might' in a sentence. People will learn grammar eventually, we shouldn't worry about it so much. |
I can't find the quiz. :(
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6 out of 10. Not bad. :hugesmile:
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Once the rules are on the way out then what used to be a common language becomes, as it used to be, a myriad of dialects ..... :eek: |
5 out of 10, You would have to have an English language degree to know half of those haha!
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How to talk Yorkshire
A young man, waiting for his date is ushered into the sitting room to keep company with father who after eleven pints is semi-comatose. Desperate to impress, t'lad (cos that's how they speak in Yorkshire) tries to engage conversation by admiring the gleaming copper coal scuttle.
"That's a grand scuttle, Mr. Rodgers, for coal" "Tha what son?" "Ah said, for coal" "Oh, ah thought tha said summat". :laugh3: |
8/10. I didn't get 3 and 8.
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This happens all the time, people worry about the language crumbling and tearing apart at the seems when it well.. isn't it. It's just change, not decay. Change does not mean standards are getting worse, they're just shifting. 300 years ago, there were two different types of 's' that had to be written depending on the word. Do you suppose that the loss of that grammatical rule is a sign of grammar standards worsening too? |
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