ChatterBank0 min ago
Shockingly bad grammar
11 Answers
I'm usually the pedantic type for spelling, grammer etc. But as this little gem came from AOLs news section you'd expect it to be phrased by someone who knew a thing or two about the written word. Takes some re-reading to make sense of it;
'surrounded by empty medication blister packs and she had drunk a half drunk pint of cider.'
'surrounded by empty medication blister packs and she had drunk a half drunk pint of cider.'
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think this isn't bad grammar, just bad editing. The writer has shuffled words around a bit and forgot to remove one of the "drunk"s. This is the sort of thing copy editors are supposed to pick up, but presumably if there were any they weren't doing their job properly.
You'll often spot typos on even the BBC website, especially in breaking stories that are published as soon as written, but they're usually corrected quickly.
You'll often spot typos on even the BBC website, especially in breaking stories that are published as soon as written, but they're usually corrected quickly.
Examples of bad spelling, grammar etc are commonplace in my local rag and give you a good laugh. Friend was a proof reader in a past life and very few mistakes got through. Nowadays with spell checks etc it is commonplace. Recent report stated that "the young man darted across the road causing the driver to break sharply". Good job his name wasn't Humpty Dumpty.
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