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Kamka
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Aug 2007
Location: Toronto, Canada
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| quote: | Originally posted by DigiNut
Iff yer tring to maik a sireus pont then u shud endevver 2 speel yur werds korrecktly. Actually, I agree with you and Graham that pointing out a person's spelling and grammatical errors accomplishes precisely nothing in the way of debunking their argument; however, that doesn't change the fact that a large number of posts are steaming piles of dog shit and make me want to gouge my eyes out.
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In the end, I'm honestly not sure who is worse, the spelling Nazis or the people who write the fodder for them. |
Hmm, spelling debate. I have to admit myself that although I usually try to spell all my words correctly, sometimes I do unintentionally make the occasional glitch. I agree that messages which don't properly assign their/they're/there or you're vs. your are annoying to read. It seems to be a simple concept, really: one is a contraction of the present continuous verb tense, and the other is a possesive pronoun, if I'm correct? Same thing with their/they're. People should really try to pay more attention to maintaining some sort of a "level" in their posts, if you get what I mean... However, as a true language freak myself, I have to admit that I myself sometimes make a few stupid spelling errors as well. For me, the reason so happening is simple: my first native language is a so-called "phonetic" language, which means that words are mostly spelled exactly as they are pronounced (mostly, because there are a lot of exceptions and a few rules which create some funny linguistic situations), and that for some reason makes it hard for me to remember the correct spelling of certain English words which have doubled consonants, such as happenned, tommorrow, and others (none come to mind right now, but when I write an e-mail, I sometimes utilise its spell-checker and I am often surprised as to how many of this kind of mispellings it finds). Although I started learning English at an age where you could still be considered acquiring it as a "native learner", somehow the L1 interference for this particular feature is still there with me. I find however, that it's improving a bit, after I had to manually correct all the mispelled words in a few of my e-mails.
Does that make me a spelling dimwitt who can't use the English language properly? 
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Dec-05-2007 06:42
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