Worse than talking in the third person is being addressed in the third person. It is acceptable when talking to a very young child who may not be able to recognise the second person pronoun but recognises his/her own name, but not to a mature adult. It used to drive me wild when a very kind mature lady from church would always greet me with, "How's Michael today?" My response was invariably, " I don't know to which Michael you are referring, but if I see him I will let him know you are asking after him". Took a while for the message to sink in.
I am bookish and indulge in geeky habits. I have always been a geek. its not about how someone looks, its about how their interests are interpreted by others.
when my friends used to drool all over bros, I used to watch formula 1
If someone just did it because they thought it sounded cool it would really annoy me, like they're constantly updating their Facebook status out loud! However, if, for example, a person spoke in the third person and was on the autistic spectrum, wouldn't bother me a bit! Am reading a book at the moment actually where the boy in that (who has autism) speaks about himself in this way.
My MIL (she's french) speaks like that; maman this and maman that is sounds as if she's talking to little kids you know what I mean 'now, you must hold Mummy's hand etc' She's the only person i know who does it.
I recall in primary school the teacher 'drumming it into us' that one should never use 'got', but always 'have'. To this day 'got' and 'gotten' sticks out like a sore thumb, and makes me wince a little.
Well Jim thinks Bobjugs is an absolute supertsar, and is above the petty worries of word usage. Therefore you binking flobdobblers Jim thinks Bobjugs should just make up his own words. And refer to himself in in the third, fourth and fifth person.
aahhhh, for years i had always wondered what the 2nd person was but never remembered to ask an english teacher. Could it be possible for a fourth person perspective and what would it be?