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how do u get bronow out of brando? :lol: some of your stuff sounds nothing like the words it should be :-P and now to answer your question:
eye haf sum won reed itt two mea |
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teachers must of loved you back in school if u didnt capitalize anything....
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i just used keys closest to the right ones for the proper spelling :razz: and about your awnser: eye haf soem wun ree iit tuo mea tou!!!1111!!!one!!111!!!! |
I was just kidding around, but actually I think this could spark an intelligent debate! :)
Maybe I misunderstood your reasoning, but are you saying that capitalization is merely a stylistic choice as opposed to a rule of english grammar? |
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My pet peeves of grammar. (and this will contain some vernacular, thank, so don't nitpick it, please. I'm just out to make points.)
Know the difference between "than" and "then", and use them correctly. You're and Your. Never double abbreviate words. "Couldn't've said it better" is completely incorrect, thought that's how we say it, that is not how one would write it. You have to pick the "not" abbreviation or spell it out. "Couldn't have", or "Could not have". Also, properly written highschool-to-college level papers are not to contain abbreviations at all. If you would like to say "wouldn't" you must say "would not". (can't - cannot, don't - do not, haven't - have not, etc.) As well, avoid using the word "you" when refering to the reader. Use "one" instead, so that the next time one writes a paper, one gets an A. I before E except after C. Tip: Try to avoid using the word "it" in a paper, use it only once. This makes the writing more colorful when items are described by their nature or by their formal name. Also, never being a sentence with the same word more than once, and come up with several different ways of describing something, so that, again, your writing is more colorful. It makes a paper look far more intelligent. Any time you feel there needs to be a pause or a breath, it probably needs a comma there. okay i'm done it's too early in the morning for this.... |
(waiting for someone to find the mistakes in last post)
:popcorn: |
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http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v3...mot-eng101.gifThis old schoolroom spelling rule is supposed to help remember
the spelling of vowels pronounced /i:/, the long "e" sound of "feed". It has no value for words where the vowel is pronounced in any other way, the key fact which people bemused by many "exceptions" to the rule usually do not realise. A version often cited in the U.K. makes the restriction clear: When the sound is /i:/, it's I before E except after C. A common U.S. version: ... or when pronounced /eI/ as in "neighbour" and "weigh". is misleading, as "ei" has many other pronunciations, as in, for instance, "height", "heifer", and "forfeit". The rule also fails to apply to names (Sheila, Keith, Leigh, etc.). "I before E": Properly applied, the rule is a very useful guide for people who are not naturally excellent spellers; those who are may look out for themselves. To an RP speaker, the exceptions in common use are very few: they are "seize", "inveigle", "caffeine", "protein", and "codeine". (The last three were originally pronounced as three-syllable words.) Other dialects pronounce a few other -ei- words with /i:/, making extra exceptions: "either" and "neither" (RP vowel: /aI/, as in "pie"), "geisha" and "sheik(h)" (RP: /eI/, as in "say"), and "leisure" (RP: /E/, as in "get"). (Of course, derivatives of the above words, such as "seizure", "decaffeinate", and "sheik(h)dom", are spelled similarly.) There are many exceptions in Scots, so speakers with a large Scots vocabulary may as well give up on this rule. The vowel in "weir" and "weird" is usually quite different, as comparison of "weird" and "weed" will show; for most speakers, "weird" has a diphthong. "except after C": Fowler, who called the rule "very useful", noted: "The c exception covers the many derivatives of Latin capio [= "take"], which are in such common use (receive, deceit, inconceivable; cf. relieve, belief, irretrievable) that a simple rule of thumb is necessary." For most Britons, /i:/ after C is always "ei" rather than "ie", except in "specie" and "species". Americans generally pronounce -cies and -cied in words derived from -cy endings (e.g., "fancies" and "fancied" from "fancy") with /i:/ rather than /I/, making these words exceptions. Still, few people have any difficulty pluralizing -y, so such speakers should still be able to extract some value from the rule, by the application of a little common sense. |
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Anyone who has a natural knack for spelling things knows that there are exceptions to every rule. ;)
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Yes it is! Go back to antarctica!!! :lol: |
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i attempt to apply all rules when writing business correspondence. i even employ a spelling and grammar checker, as i am not omniscient, either. |
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