ChatterBank2 mins ago
Grammar - does it matter?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.His point, of course, was to ask whether we really needed any of them. Questions are generally made clear by word-order, exclamations are obvious from context and so forth. Is the phrase "the mans car" any less clear than "the man's car"?
Please don't misunderstand...I am not advocating our adoption of Liddle's suggestions, as you can presumably see from my response thus far, which is punctuated to heck and back! However, I think we have to be aware that grammatical changes, too, will come whether we like them or not. Text-messaging - or rather txt-mssgng - style is already becoming common in other areas of writing. Language is a living 'organism' and it just will adapt willy-nilly as people vary their use of it. Personally, I love all the rules of punctuation and grammar as they are right now and believe it does matter that we try to retain them if only as a bulwark for as long as we can against the worst barbarities.
Think of the hoo-haa we make nowadays when someone mistakenly uses "it's" when he/she means "its" or vice versa. The fact is, though, that "its", without the apostrophe, does not appear anywhere in Shakespeare's works published in his own lifetime, for example. However, "it's" - with an apostrophe and meaning 'belonging to it' - does appear there!
The passage of time makes nonsense of the 'rules' applied in any given age and time will do exactly the same to our 'rules', too. That was the simple point of my reply. Cheers
I quote: "Suspicious and vindictive, Henry's many victims included ..." It doesn't say why his victims were suspicious. Had they simply omitted the comma it would have made sense.
Yes, grammar definitely matters. If nothing else it is a courtesy to the reader, making the writing clear, unambiguous and a pleasure to read.