How often do you correct another person’s spelling or grammar when you’re
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — The Watercooler
Damien Thorn 666 — 7 years ago(December 15, 2018 11:15 PM)
replying back to them? As long as I could understand what the recipient on the other end of the line is saying, with the spelling or grammar not applying a disorienting curse on the sentence, disintegrating it into a card with a bunch of scribbles turning the picture into a blurry 30 gram mess that has been lost deeply in translation getting sung off-key by a drunken person, then I won’t comment on the errors of the illiteracy that is getting portrayed in the person’s text. Being an unpaid English teacher with a B.S. Degree from the University of Grandeur, being a few pages short of a completed romance and sex novel.
“There are no atheists in foxholes, eh?”-Keith Jennings from the Omen. -
Damien Thorn 666 — 7 years ago(December 15, 2018 11:27 PM)
Every word that was used within those two sentences up above directly correlates with each other, belonging directly on the winding strings that tie both sentences together to form the answer to my OP in a cogent manner, with no loose threads showing. Therefore, none of it was “random”, lmfao.
“There are no atheists in foxholes, eh?”-Keith Jennings from the Omen. -
Rocketman — 7 years ago(December 16, 2018 03:20 AM)
I used to because doing so would annoy other posters, but I stopped because it got old… plus I don't exactly use the best spelling and grammar myself.
Throughout Heaven and Earth, I alone am the honored one. -
Ⲥⲏⳕⲥⲕⲁⲃⲟⲟⲙ — 7 years ago(December 16, 2018 03:23 AM)
Very rarely.
But if another user insists upon trying to correct my grammar and/or spelling, especially while practicing bad grammatical etiquette of their own, well I might just return the favor.
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