Educated Americans have a tendency to think that (i) intelligence
can be directly assessed through the surrogate of compliance with the
rules of Standard English grammar, and that (ii) compliance with the
rules of Standard English grammar can be checked quickly and easily by
glancing in Strunk and White’s brainless little pamphlet of
19th-century grammar nonsense. Both propositions are wrong and
dangerous, yet tacit acceptance of them is widespread.I have heard of a boss who openly declared that he wouldn’t have
anyone working for him who would write a split infinitive. When I
assault that as ridiculously misguided, a perversion of grammar
sensitivity, it’s not because the important thing is whether adverbs go
in between the meaningless marker to and the accompanying plain
verb in an infinitival clause. I’m not an idiot, and I don’t think the
exact location of adverbs and other verb phrase modifiers is something
to organize your life around. But that’s the whole point: it’s not me
who’s doing that, it’s this insane boss. What makes the issue a serious
one for me is that a man would judge intelligence and employability on
something like this. It does indeed display pig-ignorance of English
syntax and literary usage to be hung up on split infinitives, but
that’s the less important point. The more important side of it is that
this boss is a maniac who has his priorities all wrong. I’m worried not
about where his adverbs might go but about where his marbles have gone.
The danger is not about modifier location but about whether he will be
an insane boss in other ways as well. —Goeffrey K. Pullum, Language Log
Presidential inaugurals: the form and the content
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Sesame Street had a big plot twist in November 1986
I played hooky from work to see Wild Robot with my family
I’ve been teaching with this handout for over 25 years, updating it regularly. I just remo...
Sorry, not sorry. I don't want such friends.
In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. @thepublicpgh
My office hours were in flux because my class schedule changed at the last minute, but I always keep my current office hours here:
http://jerz.setonhill.edu/resources/about/contact.htm
“Educated” Americans or “trained” Americans? We’ve all seen the grammar Nazis who are striving to protect “the pure and superior forms of English grammar.” Derrida comes to mind here. Language is merely a way to organize and rationalize the chaotic phenomena of life. But as you stare into the abyss, the abyss stares back into you.
Pure, mechanically-efficient bureaucracy is never the best practice for any organization. Our culture seems to forget moderation. We are either lazy or pathologically stringent. Unless the constituents are wrapped up in this anal-retentive, OCD culture of high blood pressure, coffee-chugging and chain smoking…
Anyway, I noticed you don’t post your office hours online anymore (you haven’t started printing paper syllabi again, have you?) I’ve got two more apps to complete and then I’ll leave you alone. When’s a good time? I’m not sure application materials warrant a review, they should be good. Happy first week.