The standard tactic in winning a grammar argument is to throw in a well-placed "whom" from time to time. As an academic, you should know that.sloan wrote:"whom"?!?
Rick "plausibility is more important than truth" Denney
The standard tactic in winning a grammar argument is to throw in a well-placed "whom" from time to time. As an academic, you should know that.sloan wrote:"whom"?!?
I hadn't figured you for a sentimentalist of that particular sort.Rick Denney wrote:there are only two rules of language: Being understood clearly and...I forgot the other one.
That's not being sentimental.talleyrand wrote:I hadn't figured you for a sentimentalist of that particular sort.Rick Denney wrote:there are only two rules of language: Being understood clearly and...I forgot the other one.


Sadly, that may be giving these rules too much credit. Some of them are utterly artificial in the context of the English language - having been imported from Latin. That might seem preposterous now, but may have seemed more reasonable in days of yore when folks had more use for Latin, and apparently less use for common sense. One of those rules is indeed the sentence shall not end with a preposition - something John Dryden came up with in 1672. The prohibition on split infinitives is another.Rick Denney wrote: Thus, those grammar rules we learned in grade school just turned out to be how grammarians summarized those authors whom they believed wrote more clearly.

The rules made more sense when more people studied Latin and Greek, and followed the same rules in English.Donn wrote:Sadly, that may be giving these rules too much credit. Some of them are utterly artificial in the context of the English language - having been imported from Latin. That might seem preposterous now, but may have seemed more reasonable in days of yore when folks had more use for Latin, and apparently less use for common sense. One of those rules is indeed the sentence shall not end with a preposition - something John Dryden came up with in 1672. The prohibition on split infinitives is another.Rick Denney wrote: Thus, those grammar rules we learned in grade school just turned out to be how grammarians summarized those authors whom they believed wrote more clearly.

Excuse me, that may be an explanation in some fashion, but there are no circumstances where it makes sense for English to conform to the grammar of Latin or any other language. And indeed it has never done so, despite the rules.sloan wrote:The rules made more sense when more people studied Latin and Greek, and followed the same rules in English.

"English" borrows from many languages. It borrows vocabulary, usage, and yes, grammar.Donn wrote: ... there are no circumstances where it makes sense for English to conform to the grammar of Latin or any other language. And indeed it has never done so, despite the rules.
You haven't yet explained how you managed the acts of translation you were describing without resorting to some kind of rule-governed system of grammar and syntax. You despise rules, but then describe yourself doing something that can only have been done using them.

I'd be interested to hear about any specific cases where English has borrowed grammar from another language, but in this context it's important to consider the process.sloan wrote:"English" borrows from many languages. It borrows vocabulary, usage, and yes, grammar.


Which rules were you applying when you concluded that I said anything about despising rules? And when did I say anything about translation?talleyrand wrote:
You haven't yet explained how you managed the acts of translation you were describing without resorting to some kind of rule-governed system of grammar and syntax. You despise rules, but then describe yourself doing something that can only have been done using them.
Sorry. Looking back, I see that I got that one wrong.Rick Denney wrote:And when did I say anything about translation?


Wow - I'm "a poster"Todd S. Malicoate wrote:I find it extremely amusing that this topic has gone on for three pages after stemming from my correction of a poster who:
1) Used "you're" instead of the correct "your"
2) Essentially lied and called it a "typo" (no...a "typo" is a typing error...you CHOSE to type an apostrophe)
3) Came back at me by accusing me of breaking a rule that's not really a rule.
Priceless.

Of course, those were the examples Phil brought up, but he has offered good humor in atonement, and that counts for a lot. And we entertained Todd, so perhaps we should just declare success.It does still seem to me that you are working with a rule that the word "rule" is used if and only if one intends to specify an outdated rule native speakers no longer use.