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Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by ibnjarir93(m): 8:12pm On Jan 18, 2015
President Jonathan’s awkward grammatical miscues on the campaign trail

Category: The politics of grammar Published on Sunday, 18 January 2015 05:00
Written by Farooq Kperogi (PhD) farooqkperogi@gmail.com


Before any smug philistine confronts me with the usual inane retort that grammar is the least of Nigeria’s worries now, let me state that this is a grammar column. On this page, I talk only about grammar, language, and usage. Nothing else. That’s why the column is called “Politics of Grammar.” My “Notes from Atlanta” column in the Weekly Trust addresses broader, less restricted, and more variegated subject-matters. So spare me the trite, tired tripe about what I need to worry about-or about the fact that English isn’t native to Nigeria.

Paying attention to the grammar of the president of a country isn’t a trifling matter. It’s imperative in its own right. As I stated in my January 27, 2013 column titled “president Goodluck Jonathan’s Grammatical Boo-boos,” “the usage patterns of the elite of any country--especially of the president, who is the most important political and cultural figure in a country--tend to get naturalized and imitated by the general population over time.” That’s why presidents of countries are often trend-setters in the language commonly used in the countries they govern.

That’s certainly true of the United States where presidents routinely contribute to shaping the contours of the English language. I am reading an exciting little book titled Words from the White House: Words and Phrases Coined or Popularized by America’s Presidents, which I will review for this column in the coming weeks, that chronicles common words and phrases that are now central to the lexical and idiomatic rhythm of the English, but that were invented or made popular by American presidents either deliberately or initially in error. A few examples mentioned in the book are “normalcy,” “belittle,” “lengthy,” “military industrial complex,” “lunatic fringe,” “dark horse,” “frazzle,” “manifest destiny,” etc.

This election season, President Jonathan has been particularly hard on the English language.It’s like he’s on a rampage, on a linguistic murderous rage. Poor English! Well, see below some of the president’s grammatical slip-ups that stuck out like a sore thumb.

1. “Senior citizen.” Apparently, the president thinks “senior citizen” is synonymous with “(elder) statesman.” He is wrong. But, first, the context.

Smarting from recent vicious attacks on him by former President Obasanjo, President Jonathan couldn’t wait to hit back at his former benefactor. So, on January 7, 2014, when Northern Elders’ Council chairman Tanko Yakassai led members of his group to the Aso Rock Presidential Villa, President Jonathan seized the moment to strip Obasanjo of his “senior citizen” status and to demote him to a mere “motor park tout.”

“And your commitment to ensure we live in peace and harmony that is what citizens especially our senior citizens should do just like you have been doing,” President Jonathan told Yakassai. “Some people call themselves statesmen but they are not statesmen; they are just ordinary politicians. For you to be a statesman, it is not because you have occupied a big office before but the question is what are you bringing to bear?

“Some people are hiding under some cloaks, some big names and creating a lot of problems in this country, making provocative statements in this country-statements that will set this country ablaze and you tell me you are a senior citizen.You are not a senior citizen. You can never be. You are ordinary motor park tout because if you are a senior citizen you will act like one.”

People don’t become “senior citizens” through a presidential imprimatur-and they certainly don’t stop being “senior citizens” on account of a petulantly tempestuous presidential animadversion.“Senior citizen” is merely a euphemistic expression for an old person. Most dictionaries define a senior citizen as any person who is 65 years and older. Obasanjo is officially over 70 years old. That makes him a senior citizen. So when Jonathan said, “You are not a senior citizen. You can never be ,” he clearly had no clue what he was talking about. Senior citizenship isn’t an earned title; it’s invariably biological and chronological.

The term “senior citizen,” interestingly, first emerged in America in 1938 during campaigns for the country’s midterm elections which saw President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Democratic Party losing 72 seats in the House of Representatives and 7 seats in the Senate but still managing to maintain control of the Congress. “Senior citizens” was used euphemistically to refer to old Americans whose votes the Republican and Democratic parties courted aggressively. The term later crossed over to British English-and to other varieties of English. American English speakers now just say “senior(s)” instead of “citizen citizen(s),” although “senior citizen(s)” still appears in America’s informal and formal registers.

British English speakers also use the term “golden ager” as an alternative to “senior citizen.”

2. “Motor park tout.” The president also called Obasanjo a “motor park tout.” That is problematic, if excusable, phraseology. In Nigerian English “motor park touts” are people who earn a living by soliciting passengers for commercial transport drivers at “motor parks” (another uniquely Nigerian English expression, as I pointed out in my April 27, 2014 column titled “Q and A on Nigerian English Expressions and Other Usage Concerns”)

They are paid a token for every passenger they send to drivers, and have a reputation for being aggressive, crude, vulgar, untutored, and uncouth. So when Nigerians describe somebody as a “motor park tout” they usually mean such a person is tastelessly indecent or lacking refinement. That was the sense of the term President Goodluck Jonathan had in mind when he obliquely insulted former President Olusegun Obasanjo as a “motor park tout” for being openly critical of his administration.

This usage will puzzle many native English speakers. In Standard English, especially in Standard British English, a tout is understood as a person “who advertises for customers in an especially brazen way.” That sense appears consistent with Nigerian “motor park touts” who often pester potential passengers in an annoyingly aggressive manner. In British English a tout can also mean a person who buys things, usually tickets for an event, and resells them to people at a price several times higher than the original. American English speakers call such a person a “scalper.”

In Irish and Scottish English, a tout has a completely different meaning. It is used to refer to someone who betrays his group members by sharing their confidential information with the police or other authority. American English speakers also use tout, usually “le tout,” to refer to the social, political, and cultural elite of a city, as in “le tout Abuja admired him.” This sense of the term is derived from French where “le tout Paris,” which literally means “all of Paris,” is used to refer to the upper crust of the Parisian society.

It appears that when Nigerian English speakers call people “touts” they usually mean “thugs.”

3. “How much did Jim Nwobodo stole?” During a campaign stop in Enugu, the president was reported to have uttered the following cringe-worthy grammatical howlers: “How much did Jim Nwobodo stole? Money not up to the price of a Peugeot and Buhari regime send him to jail. Is that good enough?”

In English grammar when the base form of a verb (which is “steal” in President Jonathan’s quoted statement above) is preceded by an auxiliary verb (such as “did,” “might,” “should,” etc.) the base form of the verb is never inflected for tense. In other words, when “did” comes before a main verb in a sentence, the main verb always remains in the present tense.

Examples: “What did he say to you?” “Did he say anything to you?” “When I saw her last year, I didn’t like her.” “He did come to my house yesterday.” As you can see, the main verbs in the examples (“say,” “like,” and “come”) are not marked for past tense. So “how much did Jim Nwobodo stole?” should be “how much did Jim Nwobodo steal?” That’s a basic grammar rule that is taught in primary and secondary schools in Nigeria and the rest of the English-speaking world.

But while the president added an unnecessary past tense to a verb that was preceded by an auxiliary verb, he neglected to mark a main verb for past tense when he was supposed to. He said, “Buhari regime send him to jail.” That should properly be “[the] Buhari regime sent him to jail.” Or “the Buhari regime did send him to jail."
http://dailytrust.com.ng/sunday/index.php/politics-of-grammar/19359-president-jonathan-s-awkward-grammatical-miscues-on-the-campaign-trail

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Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by scribble: 8:27pm On Jan 18, 2015
Here we see Buhari on video

In just this one video, Buhari has like 1000000 grammatic blunders ..

way too long for any newspaper article but easily watched in this data friendly video


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vtan7pDiaU

and then you see Jonathan in this video looking lively


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ijwa5LTBoWU

who is more Presidential abeg?

Jonathan till APC run out of propaganda

156 Likes 14 Shares

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Drfash(f): 8:27pm On Jan 18, 2015
ogbeni no be by certificate o
so dat otueke Fisherman wit phd also commit blunders
buhari till 2019 weda u av certificate or nt

163 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Nobody: 8:28pm On Jan 18, 2015
Madam Juliaann ...come and see your president. Are you still laughing at my stupidity, are you?

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by carterguccy(m): 8:28pm On Jan 18, 2015
Jonathan promises 2 provide 2 million jobs every year if re-elected. To get more jokes from him, text JONATHAN to 2015.

CHANGE!!! CHANGE!!! CHANGE!!!

SAI BUHARI

VOTE APC!!!!!

150 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by dmjinc(m): 8:28pm On Jan 18, 2015
..
Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Nobody: 8:28pm On Jan 18, 2015
Sheet happens


It took a fellow doctor to scrutinize his blunders,


But when you talk about a man with no certificate who can't properly fill out a form...

Anyways,

Zis sface iz nat abailable.

26 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Blackchampion(m): 8:28pm On Jan 18, 2015
Nonsense.
NEXT THREAD PLS......

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by plumule(m): 8:28pm On Jan 18, 2015
really
Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by flipboss(m): 8:28pm On Jan 18, 2015
welll......
Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by GlorifiedTunde(m): 8:29pm On Jan 18, 2015
OP no get job oooo angry

13 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Raiders: 8:29pm On Jan 18, 2015
The president don't write his speech. most presidents including Obama have professional speech writers that help them write their speech. This is the reason GEJ is always boring when giving a speech because he just read through the speech without first studying it.

5 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Emmysteve(m): 8:29pm On Jan 18, 2015
Ok

1 Like

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by DickDastardly(m): 8:29pm On Jan 18, 2015
And who told this silly writer that i missed gst101 class? Pack your bag go England, na Naija be this! Very easy to spot APC paid hands this days.
Rivers money is really flowing left, right and center like a river that has over run its banks. Kudos to Amaechi!
cool

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Zeinymira(f): 8:29pm On Jan 18, 2015
PEJ syndrome grin grin

14 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by ichidodo: 8:29pm On Jan 18, 2015
Farooq the writer is working very hard to earn his propaganda pay..please people, don't call him jobless.

3 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Firefire(m): 8:30pm On Jan 18, 2015
grin grin grin


AfeeCeeeeeeee


AfeeCeeeeeeee


AfeeCeeeeeeee

8 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by superior1: 8:30pm On Jan 18, 2015
Kai...PEJ has infected GEJ


GMB 2015

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Anikulhapo(m): 8:30pm On Jan 18, 2015
.

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Ojugunrege(f): 8:30pm On Jan 18, 2015
so?
why do i find this plain annoying
writer of long prose.....get a life...duh!

4 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Collynzo9: 8:30pm On Jan 18, 2015
Absolute balderdash!

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by kelvz(m): 8:30pm On Jan 18, 2015
mr op... hope you.know you are jobless

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by shakur4luv(m): 8:31pm On Jan 18, 2015
spacebooked
Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Amya(f): 8:31pm On Jan 18, 2015
You've got to be kidding me!

So the writer of this article all in the bid to make sense ended up not making any.
Amongst the 3 things he listed up there and spent time analysing, only one ofthem is technically a blunder ('stole' rather than 'steal') which is clearly a mistake of framing.

The writer of this article just spent so much space ridiculing himself rather than the president who he sought to ridicule. It was clearly written with bias and bad faith.

Need I remind anyone that English is a borrowed language and having a good command of the language is not necessarily intelligence as proven by the writer of this article. If you really want to discredit our humble amiable president, please try harder. This is one big pile of poo.

14 Likes 1 Share

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Firefire(m): 8:31pm On Jan 18, 2015
scribble:
Here we see Buhari on video

In just this one video, Buhari has like 1000000 grammatic blunders ..

way too long for any newspaper article but easily watched in this data friendly video


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vtan7pDiaU

Nigerians, please compare and contrast grin

6 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by tola9ja: 8:32pm On Jan 18, 2015
EKITI PEOPLE DON ENTER 1 CHANCE SEE WHAT STOMACH INFRASTRUCTURE CAUSE



Shameful
Ekiti: Fayose Personally Raids Market, Impounds Traders’ Wares over support for Buhari?
It was a shocking spectacle last evening as Governor Ayodele Fayose allegedly caused a stir in Ado-Ekiti when he personally drove a white Hilux van into the Oja Oba Market through Okesa chasing off market women selling by roadsides and carting away their wares.
The most shocking of the drama was in front of Ewi Palace where Fayose jumped out of the vehicle and starting personally impounding the wares displayed by the traders.

One of the vehicles involved in the raid developed a fault and Fayose supervised other men who fastened the vehicle to another that drove the faulty vehicle out of the place.
It was wailing and curses as the governor said he had no regret clearing the women out of the streets.

It was gathered that the governor was in possession of information that market women have been rooting for Buhari and had on some occasions expressed worry to the market women leaders not to abandon him. Instead of the women backing down, it is more support everyday for Buhari and Fayose vowed to deal with them.

The okada riders had had their own bitter tale to tell on the day President Jonathan campaigned in Ado-Ekiti. Fayose had banked on the okada riders’ support to chalk up the crowd at the rally. But okada riders refused to show up over Fayose’s unfavorable policy on okada operations in the state. Of late, okada riders have been very hostile to the governor as they no longer follow him any where he goes. And so as Jonathan departed the stadium enroute Akure to Abuja, okada riders in their hundreds started chanting “Sai Buhari” to the long convoy of the President.

In the evening, Fayose sent thugs against okada riders at Okeyinmi roundabout where they shouted Sai Buhari and sent them packing. Several of them were wounded while trying to escape.

But okada riders’ behaviour has put Fayose in trouble in the presidency as Jonathan had discovered that the governor kept N100m provided for the rally mobilization to himself. It was learnt that some leaders told the party headquarters in Abuja that Fayose did not give anybody any money sent from Abuja, instead the governor mandated PDP members to contribute money for the rally.

Some members refused to contribute money for mobilisation, leaving the governor with a choice of forcing civil servants and teachers to compulsorily attend the rally. The permanent secretary that stood in Fayose’s way was summarily dismissed through radio announcement.

The governor only yesterday commissioned some thugs to be removing Buhari’s posters in Ado-Ekiti. But this evening, APC responded by repasting Buhari’s posters across the state.
The presidential election fever is here and so both PDP and Fayose are every minute catching cold.

11 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by alienvirus: 8:32pm On Jan 18, 2015
Fair enough

tola9ja:
lol
shakur4luv:
spacebooked
DickDastardly:
U for unity
Emmysteve:
Ok
Raiders:
.
flipboss:
welll......
plumule:
really
dmjinc:
..
carterguccy:
[quote author=RicKyRichards post=29913421]Lol

Guys how far. Happy Nairaland moments. SMH4U

2 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by proxillin(m): 8:32pm On Jan 18, 2015
Abeg leave Jonathan alone

2 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by januzaj(m): 8:32pm On Jan 18, 2015
chai
Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by Nobody: 8:32pm On Jan 18, 2015
I am yet to neither read nor see where Mr president claimed to be a professor of English language , therefore , he is excusable for any blunder he commits on the language . Even professors or natives of the language or any other language can and still make some mistakes in it . Perfection is an exclusive reserve for the creator of the universe .

11 Likes

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by slimpoppa(m): 8:32pm On Jan 18, 2015
Like husband, like wife.

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Gbagauns: President Jonathan’s Grammatical Blunders During His Campaign Speeches by vacant06(m): 8:33pm On Jan 18, 2015
E goats

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