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Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? - Education (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralEducationDo You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? (21553 Views)

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Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by helinues: 12:46pm On May 26
Laughing in Mandarin.

Inability to speak good English can never make you un smart
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by InvertedHammer: 12:47pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
Do you still say 'My trousers has gators' or 'I want to put gators on my trousers'? If you do, it is totally wrong in standard English. This is the reason why some Nigerians get rejected for teaching jobs in the UK and in the US.

When you address grammatical mistakes, people that hate learning and knowledge, and those who don't know the essence of correct communication in business in formal environments will argue unnecessarily with you from a baseless perspective.

Gator is a short word for "alligator," which is a large reptile. In very specific, rare fashion contexts, a "gator" can also refer to a material or leather texture that looks like crocodile skin, but it is never used to describe clothing lines.

WHAT TO SAY:
1. My trousers has a sharp crease
2. Our trousers have sharp creases
3. I want to make the crease of my trousers to be sharp.

Crease is the line, mark, or ridge produced on fabric when it is folded and ironed.

I hope you have learnt something today?

I am WarriParrot.
/
Not a problem as long as you understand that some born and bred British students still score "F" in English classes.

/
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by RightToReject(m): 12:52pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
Do you still say 'My trousers has gators' or 'I want to put gators on my trousers'? If you do, it is totally wrong in standard English. This is the reason why some Nigerians get rejected for teaching jobs in the UK and in the US.

When you address grammatical mistakes, people that hate learning and knowledge, and those who don't know the essence of correct communication in business in formal environments will argue unnecessarily with you from a baseless perspective.

Gator is a short word for "alligator," which is a large reptile. In very specific, rare fashion contexts, a "gator" can also refer to a material or leather texture that looks like crocodile skin, but it is never used to describe clothing lines.

WHAT TO SAY:
1. My trousers has a sharp crease
2. Our trousers have sharp creases
3. I want to make the crease of my trousers to be sharp.

Crease is the line, mark, or ridge produced on fabric when it is folded and ironed.

I hope you have learnt something today?

I am WarriParrot.
Say after me: My trousers "have," not "has." "This is so because "trousers" is a plural-only noun.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Host78: 12:58pm On May 26
Next tomorrow was nothing but today it's something.

Gator is fine. You cannot say sharp crease to refer to the specific line on the trouser.

A sharp crease can mean a lot of things and more importantly, it's not specific.

Not everything is known in the English language and it's a sign of low intelligent to try and give everything an English name.

Just as some people call akara, bean cake or whatever.

It's gator. It's what we call it.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by sinola(m): 12:58pm On May 26
na money we dey find to able to survive this Tinubu government .....who good grammar epp

Besides, English no be our mother language.

Odumeje rightly said, as an Afrikan, if you make mistake trying to speak English, you are collekt grin grin grin grin
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by WatchYourSix: 1:05pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
Go and find out why countries like Barbados, Ghana, etc are considered English speaking countries in the UK in terms of admission and employment, but Nigerians need to write TOEFL or IELTS to scale through.
Baba…..Na gator…. See the tail … see the trousers

Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Rapmoney(op): 1:10pm On May 26
RightToReject:
Say after me: My trousers "have," not "has." "This is so because "trousers" is a plural-only noun.
You're deceiving yourself. Trousers is a pair. It is 'has' and not 'have'. I'm sure you didn't pass English in school.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by CandidSeeker(m): 1:18pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
Do you still say 'My trousers has gators' or 'I want to put gators on my trousers'? If you do, it is totally wrong in standard English. This is the reason why some Nigerians get rejected for teaching jobs in the UK and in the US.

When you address grammatical mistakes, people that hate learning and knowledge, and those who don't know the essence of correct communication in business in formal environments will argue unnecessarily with you from a baseless perspective.

Gator is a short word for "alligator," which is a large reptile. In very specific, rare fashion contexts, a "gator" can also refer to a material or leather texture that looks like crocodile skin, but it is never used to describe clothing lines.

WHAT TO SAY:
1. My trousers has a sharp crease
2. Our trousers have sharp creases
3. I want to make the crease of my trousers to be sharp.

Crease is the line, mark, or ridge produced on fabric when it is folded and ironed.

I hope you have learnt something today?

I am WarriParrot.
English is a language, not a measure of intelligence.

Never look down on anyone for speaking incorrect or broken english.

It means they speak more than one language.

How many others can British & Americans speak?🤷🏽‍♂️
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Rapmoney(op): 1:20pm On May 26
CandidSeeker:
English is a language, not a measure of intelligence.

Never look down on anyone for speaking incorrect or broken english.

It means they speak more than one language.

How many others can British & Americans speak?🤷🏽‍♂️
Why not replace English in WAEC and NECO with your local language? Tell your school or your employer that 'English is just a language '.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by WatchYourSix: 1:22pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
You're deceiving yourself. Trousers is a pair. It is 'has' and not 'have'. I'm sure you didn't pass English in school.
… baba its not bad to admit mistake and correct yourself instead of resulting to insult as defence…..

U wey come teach grammar nor sabi concord,….u just Dey jump on mentions they insult pple
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Rapmoney(op): 1:24pm On May 26
WatchYourSix:
… baba its not bad to admit mistake and correct yourself instead of resulting to insult as defence…..

U wey come teach grammar nor sabi concord,….u just Dey jump on mentions they insult pple
RESORTING and not RESULTING.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by WatchYourSix: 1:27pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
RESORTING and not RESULTING.
I admit my error… have u admitted yours….??


U dont even know why it should be have and not has.. as pointed out by righttoreject
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by RightToReject(m): 1:29pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
You're deceiving yourself. Trousers is a pair. It is 'has' and not 'have'. I'm sure you didn't pass English in school.
Conceit can never allow small people like you to grow.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by WatchYourSix: 1:33pm On May 26
RightToReject:
Conceit can never allow small people like you to grow.
He’s not only proud ….. he also doesnt know why it should be have and not has in the first place….
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by goslowgoslow(m): 1:36pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
Do you still say 'My trousers has gators' or 'I want to put gators on my trousers'? If you do, it is totally wrong in standard English. This is the reason why some Nigerians get rejected for teaching jobs in the UK and in the US.

When you address grammatical mistakes, people that hate learning and knowledge, and those who don't know the essence of correct communication in business in formal environments will argue unnecessarily with you from a baseless perspective.

Gator is a short word for "alligator," which is a large reptile. In very specific, rare fashion contexts, a "gator" can also refer to a material or leather texture that looks like crocodile skin, but it is never used to describe clothing lines.

WHAT TO SAY:
1. My trousers has a sharp crease
2. Our trousers have sharp creases
3. I want to make the crease of my trousers to be sharp.

Crease is the line, mark, or ridge produced on fabric when it is folded and ironed.

I hope you have learnt something today?

I am WarriParrot.
See wetin dem dey carry come front page as if English is our language. I have never seen anyone correcting the mistakes in the way we speak our native dialects. Mental slavery is still around.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by enemyofprogress: 1:41pm On May 26
Op if you like sermonise it from now till the end of the world, our gators remain gators forever. We inherited the gators and we will handle it over to the unborn generations. Come to think of it, Op is it your gator?
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Danja: 1:46pm On May 26
I don’t have any intention to live or work in any foreign country. So I can manage my Nigerian English. Those who have intention to Japa one day, should take note.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by RightToReject(m): 1:55pm On May 26
WatchYourSix:
He’s not only proud ….. he also doesnt know why it should be have and not has in the first place….
Don't mind the guy. I didn't even bother to read more than two lines on his OP because of more than two obvious errors he made in the sentences, and that is someone who wants to form an English expert.

It's obvious that he hasn't known about plural-only nouns before now, which include words like accessories, glasses, goggles, pliers, tweezers, binoculars, scissors, and tongs.

That said, no one knows it all, and no one is above mistakes.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Toymax88: 2:17pm On May 26
I'm GATORING my trousers
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Rapmoney(op): 2:23pm On May 26
WatchYourSix:
I admit my error… have u admitted yours….??


U dont even know why it should be have and not has.. as pointed out by righttoreject
Yes, I admit it is 'have' and not 'has'. Thank you. It was an error.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Rapmoney(op): 2:24pm On May 26
RightToReject:
Don't mind the guy. I didn't even bother to read more than two lines on his OP because of more than two obvious errors he made in the sentences, and that is someone who wants to form an English expert.

It's obvious that he hasn't known about plural-only nouns before now, which include words like accessories, glasses, goggles, pliers, tweezers, binoculars, scissors, and tongs.

That said, no one knows it all, and no one is above mistakes.
That was an error. It is supposed to be 'have'.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Guestmale: 2:47pm On May 26
Stephen0mozzy:
No Sir. That gator is the one we hereby declare as APPROPRIATE.

You no see how the line on the trousers straight like aligator spinal cord?

Crease kor Grease ni 🤧
grin grin grin
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Emeskhalifa(m): 2:50pm On May 26
Stephen0mozzy:
No Sir. That gator is the one we hereby declare as APPROPRIATE.

You no see how the line on the trousers straight like aligator spinal cord?

Crease kor Grease ni 🤧
Hahahaha
But why can't we just have our own English and let the world just recognise it?
Must we copy everything oyibo handed to us?
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by CandidSeeker(m): 2:53pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
Why not replace English in WAEC and NECO with your local language? Tell your school or your employer that 'English is just a language '.
You can also create an altar for english language in your house & worship it everyday🤣🤣🤣
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by SeriouslySense(m): 2:59pm On May 26
Thanks, from today I'll use crease. So, I need a crease on my trouser.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by BarrElChapo(m): 3:02pm On May 26
Stephen0mozzy:
I'd rather take Gatorade Sir.
😂😂😂😂 nice come back
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Neoteny(m): 3:03pm On May 26
Rapmoney:
Do you still say 'My trousers has gators' or 'I want to put gators on my trousers'? If you do, it is totally wrong in standard English. This is the reason why some Nigerians get rejected for teaching jobs in the UK and in the US.

When you address grammatical mistakes, people that hate learning and knowledge, and those who don't know the essence of correct communication in business in formal environments will argue unnecessarily with you from a baseless perspective.

Gator is a short word for "alligator," which is a large reptile. In very specific, rare fashion contexts, a "gator" can also refer to a material or leather texture that looks like crocodile skin, but it is never used to describe clothing lines.

WHAT TO SAY:
1. My trousers has a sharp crease
2. Our trousers have sharp creases
3. I want to make the crease of my trousers to be sharp.

Crease is the line, mark, or ridge produced on fabric when it is folded and ironed.

I hope you have learnt something today?

I am WarriParrot.
Let's correct the corrector:


Rapmoney:
If you do, it is totally wrong in standard English.
“Totally wrong” is informal and absolute.

More formal wording: “If you do, that usage is non-standard in British or American English.”

Rapmoney:
This is the reason why some Nigerians get rejected for teaching jobs in the UK and in the US.
Understandable, but stylistically awkward and makes a sweeping statement without facts.

Better: “This is one reason some Nigerians are rejected…”

or

“This may be one reason some Nigerians are rejected…”

“The reason why” is often considered redundant in formal writing.

Rapmoney:
When you address grammatical mistakes, people that hate learning and knowledge, and those who don't know the essence of correct communication in business in formal environments will argue unnecessarily with you from a baseless perspective.
There's a problem here with the relative pronoun choice.

"People THAT hate" ought to be "people WHO hate"


Rapmoney:
hate learning and knowledge
Awkward. Knowledge is not usually something people “hate” grammatically in this construction.

Better: “people who dislike learning…”

or

“people who resist correction…”


Rapmoney:
the essence of correct communication in business in formal environments
Clumsy and awkward phrasing.

Better: “the importance of effective communication in professional environments.”


Rapmoney:
argue unnecessarily with you from a baseless perspective
Poor collocation, making the statement awkward and unnatural.

Better: “argue with you without a sound basis”

or

“object without evidence.”


Rapmoney:
Gator is a short word for ‘alligator' but it is never used to describe clothing lines.
Not really a grammar issue but a semantic/factual issue. “Clothing lines” means fashion brands/collections. The discussion concerns trouser creases, not fashion labels.

Better: “…but it is not used in standard English to describe trouser creases.”

Rapmoney:
Crease is the line, mark, or ridge…
Wrong article.

Better: "A crease is a line, mark, or ridge…”


Rapmoney:
I hope you have learnt something today?
Punctuation issue. This should generally be “I hope you have learnt something today.”

Full stop and not a question mark, unless the OP is genuinely asking: “Have you learnt something today?”

Your post criticizing others’ English contains several grammar, style, diction, and usage problems itself.

Mine probably does too but...so's the way of the world 😊
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Rollingdollar: 3:29pm On May 26
If gator is Nigeria alternative word for British crease then let it be. Why must we always conform to foreign culture, we have ours let's embrace them and be proud of them. Bristol and other Caucasian believe there is no world outside Europe and north America and they are not even striving to have that knowledge like we African do. We need to believe more in ourselves
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Rapmoney(op): 3:31pm On May 26
Neoteny:
Let's correct the corrector:




“Totally wrong” is informal and absolute.

More formal wording: “If you do, that usage is non-standard in British or American English.”



Understandable, but stylistically awkward and makes a sweeping statement without facts.

Better: “This is one reason some Nigerians are rejected…”

or

“This may be one reason some Nigerians are rejected…”

“The reason why” is often considered redundant in formal writing.



There's a problem here with the relative pronoun choice.

"People THAT hate" ought to be "people WHO hate"




Awkward. Knowledge is not usually something people “hate” grammatically in this construction.

Better: “people who dislike learning…”

or

“people who resist correction…”




Clumsy and awkward phrasing.

Better: “the importance of effective communication in professional environments.”




Poor collocation, making the statement awkward and unnatural.

Better: “argue with you without a sound basis”

or

“object without evidence.”




Not really a grammar issue but a semantic/factual issue. “Clothing lines” means fashion brands/collections. The discussion concerns trouser creases, not fashion labels.

Better: “…but it is not used in standard English to describe trouser creases.”



Wrong article.

Better: "A crease is a line, mark, or ridge…”




Punctuation issue. This should generally be “I hope you have learnt something today.”

Full stop and not a question mark, unless the OP is genuinely asking: “Have you learnt something today?”

Your post criticizing others’ English contains several grammar, style, diction, and usage problems itself.

Mine probably does too but...so's the way of the world 😊
You should have checked the validity of your claims before quoting me. Argue with evidence, not for the sake of arguing just to dispute without sound references.

The only error in my post is using 'has' instead of 'have' for trousers (oversight) which you could not even point out. Every other thing you mentioned is balderdash.
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Rollingdollar: 3:44pm On May 26
I think the essence of communication is to encode a message to a receiver to decode and once the receiver was able to decode the msg communication has taken place. The question now is does Nigerian know the meaning of gator?
Re: Do You Still Commit This Grammatical Blunder? by Stephen0mozzy: 3:56pm On May 26
SmartyPants:
grin ya a funny guy. I for like add one or two cold stout to ya Gatorade
Make them ship am come 😅🤣
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