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The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students - Education (6) - Nairaland

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Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Nobody: 4:26pm On Oct 15, 2014
MissMeiya:


What language are you speaking? Is it any Nigerian language, or even pidgin? So, by your own criteria, you wouldn't even respect yourself, would you. Stop excusing mediocrity.

I suppose because the Internet was invented in America, you would have no problem paying a Nigerian web designer to build you a website that didn't work. "Cuz it's the slave man's invention."

You are a fool, and you will never develop or improve.
Hey girl :-) just take it easy and don't let that hold you back. Nairaland is like a war zone for some folks:-)
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by MEILYN(m): 4:27pm On Oct 15, 2014
solomonsojay:


SIr OP.
With all humility, I don't quite understand why you started this thread sef!

You said and I quote "immediately,I felt the
"spirit of bad English' in what he said above". If your main reason was to question why most Nigerian students hardly speak correct english, then you sure have a big problem with presentation which equally portray your poor english language skills.

If you don't mind sir, I will gladly support my arguments with a few salient points.

1. There is NOTHING like GOOD or BAD English like you said in the parted I quoted earlier.
Its either its CORRECT or INCORRECT English.

2. English has NO spirit hence, bad english spirit can not be in a statment. 'also quoting from your statement'. Am sure u just wanted to say u weren't too sure if that clause was ok for the intended purpose in which it was used.

3. Seeing all the flaws in your write up and studying various poorly placed patterns in your writing skills, I SAY WITH ALL HUMILITY...you DO NOT have the intellectual capacity to dabble into a topic such as this which tries to invalidate the proficiency of somone's use of a language such as the western english.

I rest my case.
but knowing that there is not one who is perfect...I STAND TO BE "WISELY" CORRECTED.
grin
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by fulfillment22: 4:27pm On Oct 15, 2014
Keenysbojan:
what course did you study in school?

Oyinbo gun ni o, chai...
it should be: 'which course did you study in the school?' yet, u say sm1 is dull*
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Nobody: 4:27pm On Oct 15, 2014
Even your post has got grammatical error(s) here and there but somehow,you were still able to pass your message across. It's just an expression people use so relax.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by twosquare(m): 4:29pm On Oct 15, 2014
Informally,it is correct and right. The mistake on the part of the OP(Keenysbojan) was lumping everything together. Although language use change overtime but the graphological representation should be in this format,
"I was like,'okay,let me call your younger brother.'"

Between 'I was like' and 'okay' there is some kind of microscopic pause from the speaker who is now quoting his thoughts and perception...from "okay"...such a person is narrating is sub-conscious soliloquy.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by roymary: 4:29pm On Oct 15, 2014
valmunich:
I opened, read and decided to book space

I then noticed that there's a nigga out there craving to have this space....



I was like ok, this property is not for sale undecided

"Then, i noticed..."
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Olaone1: 4:30pm On Oct 15, 2014
It is 100% correct! "Like" is a filler word. You can call it a "stabilizer". Just LIKE using non-word "stabilizers" such as "erm", "ah", "ehm", etc.

Even the phrase "I mean" is a stabilizer

I will be back
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Nobody: 4:31pm On Oct 15, 2014
Joenice:
Hey girl :-) just take it easy and don't let that hold you back. Nairaland is like a war zone for some folks:-)
INNOisBACK:
sadsad cry
Sorry... I lost my temper.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by teeghurl(f): 4:33pm On Oct 15, 2014
IYANGBALI:
just like the op
lol
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by valmunich(m): 4:35pm On Oct 15, 2014
roymary:


"Then, i noticed..."
cool cool cool
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Tbken: 4:35pm On Oct 15, 2014
Keenysbojan:
I can see some traces of dullness..(no offence please)
the guy nailed you
you are the one dull here:::better fasten up
no be must say we go speak vocab sef::americans no even see beta english speak

1 Like

Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by chucky234(m): 4:36pm On Oct 15, 2014
"I was like ok" is totally wrong, you say "I said" instead.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Babasquare: 4:37pm On Oct 15, 2014
Actress Emma Thompson says young people
make themselves sound stupid by speaking slang
outside of school. But while the use of the word
"like" might annoy her, it fulfils a useful role in
everyday speech.
"That's, like, so unfair."
One response to Emma Thompson's comments likely
to trigger a rush of steam from her ears.
The Oscar winner has spoken out against the use of
sloppy language. She says people who speak
improperly make her feel "insane" and she criticises
teenagers for using words such as "like" and "innit".
But is peppering one's sentences with "like" such a
heinous crime against the English tongue?
Language experts are more understanding of teen
culture than Thompson, pointing out the word's
many uses. It's the unconventional uses that are
probably getting the actress hot under the collar. One of the most common is using "like" as a filler word in a conversation.
But fillers are a way we all stall for time when
speaking and historically always have. It has nothing to do with sloppiness, says John Ayto, editor of the Oxford Dictionary of Modern Slang.
"It is not a lazy use of language, that is a common
fallacy among non-linguists," he says. "We all use
fillers because we can't keep up highly-monitored,
highly-grammatical language all the time. We all have to pause and think.
"We have always used words to plug gaps or make
sentences run smoothly. They probably did in Anglo Saxon times, it's nothing new."
But crucially, we often use non-word fillers, such at
"um" and "ah". The fact that "like" is an actual word could be why Thompson doesn't like it.

“Using 'um' may seem more correct to Emma
Thompson because using 'like' as a filler is not a
feature of her language” Robert Groves
Editor of the Dictionary of the English Language
Thompson attacks use of sloppy language
"When words break out from a specific use and
become commonly used in a different way, people
come down on them," says Dr Robert Groves, editor of the Collins Dictionary Of The English Language.
"Using 'um' may seem more correct to Emma
Thompson because using 'like' as a filler is not a
feature of the language she uses. The more
disassociated you are from the group that uses a
word in a different way, the more that use stands out.
It will be invisible to teenagers."
Another common use of "like" by young people is as a quotative, which is a grammatical device to mark reported speech. For example: "She was like, 'you aren't using that word correctly' and I was like, 'yes I am'."
It is also commonly used to indicate a metaphor or
exaggeration. "I, like, died of embarrassment when
you told me to stop using slang." Alternatively, it is
employed to introduce a facial expression, gesture or sound. A speaker may say "I was like..." and then hold their hands up, shrug or roll their eyes.
While certain uses of language - such as fillers - have probably always been around, the appropriation of "like" in this context can be traced to a familiar source of so much modern day slang- California's Valley Girls.

"Many of these uses of 'like' originate in America,"
says Dr Groves. "They were probably introduced into British English through the media, like films and television."
Using "like" in this way is also about signalling
membership of a club, says English language
specialist Professor Clive Upton, from the Universit
of Leeds.
"If they [young people] do deploy the sort of
language they're using on the streets in formal
settings then it could well be a disadvantage to them but at other times it's quite clearly the way they get along, the way that they signal they belong in a group, the way that they fit in.
"And we all do that in our professional lives as well.
We've got all our acronyms and our little words that we use that send a signal - I'm one of the club."
Thompson just isn't part of the "like" club.
Source: www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-11426737
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Tex42(m): 4:37pm On Oct 15, 2014
was just passing by when i kinda noticed that the op was stylishly insulting pple on this thread,so i was like,ok let me let u guys know that the op is being childish(no offence @ op)
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by EbuGeneral(m): 4:38pm On Oct 15, 2014
OP, must we speak queen's english. after close examination of this thread, i was like ok this op just know everything.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by chucky234(m): 4:38pm On Oct 15, 2014
Tbken:
the guy nailed you
you are the one dull here:::better fasten up
no be must say we go speak vocab sef::americans no even see beta english speak
ITK "I Was like ok" is a wrong grammar.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Babasquare: 4:40pm On Oct 15, 2014
They are fillers and it is either you like them or not. But there is no need to condescend to those whose choices are differnt from yours...
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by chucky234(m): 4:41pm On Oct 15, 2014
Karleb:


That explains why you quoted me twice, just to say this.


Some people can be silly sha.
"I was like ok" is totally wrong, you say "I said" instead.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by chucky234(m): 4:43pm On Oct 15, 2014
Keenysbojan:
please explain to us..we are to learn
"I was like ok" is totally wrong, you say "I said" instead.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Fxwarrior: 4:43pm On Oct 15, 2014
Keenysbojan:
I have been wondering why Nigerian students always use the word 'i was like ok' in every of their saying... I found it difficult to believe that 'i was like ok' is a correct short sentence, in English...

because I have sat down and think about this all over and over and over,and through research I found that there is no short sentence in English, like 'i was like ok'.. but some Nigerians are so terrible when it comes to the aspects of speaking or writing standard English...

A student of unilorin came to meet my big bro at home,and he said I have been trying your number since I left Lagos and I WAS LIKE OK LET ME CALL YOUR YOUNGER BROTHER TO CONFIRM..

immediately,I felt the 'spirit of bad English' in what he said above... since then I have been searching,I have been asking those who are highly educated and those who study English in universities.. if the use of I WAS LIKE OK is good to speak..

to nairelanders do any of you have anything to say about this topic... share your own points of view and let some 'BAD English speaker(s)' learn from you.. thanks

Yours Faithfully
k e e n y s b o j a n

Op, you didn't feel the spirit of bad English in your writeup above filled with grammatical blunders that would leave your English teacher denying you like Peter denied Jesus.

Example of your gbagaun: to nairalanders do any of you... Chai! Chisos. Instead of does any of you.. Not to talk of not using appropriate marks..

Yours Faithfully.. When did f in Yours faithfully become capital letter.

Op it will take a whole day to correct your whole speech.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by marvmurphy(m): 4:43pm On Oct 15, 2014
Karleb:
There is nothing wrong with that phrase, it's just that it is no formal English.
thank u o!

1 Like

Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by yadnus1(m): 4:45pm On Oct 15, 2014
It is a lazy way of constructing sentences like l rightly stated here
www.nairaland.com/1927314/funny-things-only-nigerians/2#26761516
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by CAMNEWTON4PRES: 4:45pm On Oct 15, 2014
fulfillment22:


Oyinbo gun ni o, chai...
it should be: 'which course did you study in the school?' yet, u say sm1 is dull*
can say both tho
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by SlimSkipper(m): 4:45pm On Oct 15, 2014
i was like wetin b dis tread
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Nobody: 4:46pm On Oct 15, 2014
Keenysbojan:
I have been wondering why Nigerian students always use the word 'i was like ok' in every of their saying... I found it difficult to believe that 'i was like ok' is a correct short sentence, in English...

because I have sat down and think about this all over and over and over,and through research I found that there is no short sentence in English, like 'i was like ok'.. but some Nigerians are so terrible when it comes to the aspects of speaking or writing standard English...

A student of unilorin came to meet my big bro at home,and he said I have been trying your number since I left Lagos and I WAS LIKE OK LET ME CALL YOUR YOUNGER BROTHER TO CONFIRM..

immediately,I felt the 'spirit of bad English' in what he said above... since then I have been searching,I have been asking those who are highly educated and those who study English in universities.. if the use of I WAS LIKE OK is good to speak..

to nairelanders do any of you have anything to say about this topic... share your own points of view and let some 'BAD English speaker(s)' learn from you.. thanks

Yours Faithfully
k e e n y s b o j a n

And why Unilorin now?
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Olaone1: 4:46pm On Oct 15, 2014
Your answer from the BBC. Enjoy it. wink wink

Teen slang: What's, like, so wrong with like?
By Denise Winterman BBC News Magazine

Emma Thompson: Teenage slang - do I not like that?

Actress Emma Thompson says young people make themselves sound stupid by speaking slang outside of school. But while the use of the word "like" might annoy her, it fulfils a useful role in everyday speech.

"That's, like, so unfair."

One response to Emma Thompson's comments likely to trigger a rush of steam from her ears.

The Oscar winner has spoken out against the use of sloppy language. She says people who speak improperly make her feel "insane" and she criticises teenagers for using words such as "like" and "innit".

But is peppering one's sentences with "like" such a heinous crime against the English tongue?

Language experts are more understanding of teen culture than Thompson, pointing out the word's many uses. It's the unconventional uses that are probably getting the actress hot under the collar. One of the most common is using "like" as a filler word in a conversation.

But fillers are a way we all stall for time when speaking and historically always have. It has nothing to do with sloppiness, says John Ayto, editor of the Oxford Dictionary of Modern Slang.

"It is not a lazy use of language, that is a common fallacy among non-linguists," he says. "We all use fillers because we can't keep up highly-monitored, highly-grammatical language all the time. We all have to pause and think.

[size=13pt]"We have always used words to plug gaps or make sentences run smoothly. They probably did in Anglo Saxon times, it's nothing new."
[/size]
[size=18pt]But crucially, we often use non-word fillers, such at "um" and "ah". The fact that "like" is an actual word could be why Thompson doesn't like it.

“Start Quote

Using 'um' may seem more correct to Emma Thompson because using 'like' as a filler is not a feature of her language”

Robert Groves Editor of the Dictionary of the English Language


"When words break out from a specific use and become commonly used in a different way, people come down on them," says Dr Robert Groves, editor of the Collins Dictionary Of The English Language.

"Using 'um' may seem more correct to Emma Thompson because using 'like' as a filler is not a feature of the language she uses. The more disassociated you are from the group that uses a word in a different way, the more that use stands out. It will be invisible to teenagers."

[size=17pt]
Another common use of "like" by young people is as a quotative, which is a grammatical device to mark reported speech. For example: "She was like, 'you aren't using that word correctly' and I was like, 'yes I am'."[/size]
[size=13pt]
It is also commonly used to indicate a metaphor or exaggeration. "I, like, died of embarrassment when you told me to stop using slang." Alternatively, it is employed to introduce a facial expression, gesture or sound. A speaker may say "I was like..." and then hold their hands up, shrug or roll their eyes.[/size]

While certain uses of language - such as fillers - have probably always been around, the appropriation of "like" in this context can be traced to a familiar source of so much modern day slang- California's Valley Girls.

Teenage girls

A guide to teenage slang

"Many of these uses of 'like' originate in America," says Dr Groves. "They were probably introduced into British English through the media, like films and television."


Using "like" in this way is also about signalling membership of a club, says English language specialist Professor Clive Upton, from the University of Leeds.

"If they [young people] do deploy the sort of language they're using on the streets in formal settings then it could well be a disadvantage to them but at other times it's quite clearly the way they get along, the way that they signal they belong in a group, the way that they fit in.

"And we all do that in our professional lives as well. We've got all our acronyms and our little words that we use that send a signal - I'm one of the club."

Thompson just isn't part of the "like" club.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-11426737
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Sheenor: 4:47pm On Oct 15, 2014
MissMeiya:


Yes, it does. This "English is not my father's language" is a shoddy excuse for poor grammar. Which language are you using right now? Whatever language you are using, you must use it correctly.

Did you know that English is not America's official language? But it is Nigeria's official language. Who should speak it better? Smh.

Pardon my ignorance please, buh what's America official language??...
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by nijanigga: 4:48pm On Oct 15, 2014
Nigerian youths like to copy everything, even things that don't fit into our culture.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Tbken: 4:49pm On Oct 15, 2014
chucky234:
ITK "I Was like ok" is a wrong grammar.
i cant hear you oooo
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by Olaone1: 4:50pm On Oct 15, 2014
From a commenter:

It's a good job Emma didn't live in the late 16th Century/ early 17th Century. There was a guy running around back then who didnt use language as his peers did, he made up words, changed the structure of how he used these new made up words and flouted the conventional thinking on most aspects of English. He was called William Shakespeare... Language is not a set of rules, its a way of communication. The one constant thing with a thriving language is change.
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by SlyIg(f): 4:53pm On Oct 15, 2014
briantex:
[size=58pt] I was like lemme comment but ah said no,its of no use[/size]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8a6Kna-xF5g

Da awo!
Ekama 2go star anam nso?
Re: The Use Of 'i Was Like Ok' By Nigerian Students by BAYKEM(m): 4:53pm On Oct 15, 2014
I was like you are right

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