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RE: Act versus pass (WAS Disp versus App-Which One? ) (slightly O T/ra nt)
Subject:RE: Act versus pass (WAS Disp versus App-Which One? ) (slightly O T/ra nt) From:"Susan W. Gallagher" <sgallagher -at- kinzan -dot- com> To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com> Date:Wed, 20 Dec 2000 16:56:47 -0800
> Jo Byrd writes:
>
> For some reason I managed to get through grade school and
> most of high
> school
> without having a grasp of grammar...
Barbara Yanez says:
>
>
> You and I had the same experience. I didn't understand
> grammar very well
> when in elementary school, high school, etc., - in fact I DETESTED ths
> subject...
Idunno if it's just that I'm *O*L*D* <toothless-g> or it was the
parochial school education, but I had grammar drilled into me at
a very early age. In fact, I used to think that diagraming sentences
was great fun! So much so, in fact, that I wrote a love poem that
included a diagramed sentence while I was in high school. (okay,
so there was a little bit of e.e.cummings influence mixed in with
the nuns!)
And in college, I'd use sentence diagrams to help me make sense
out of exceptionally dense text -- Thomas Aquinas comes to mind.
When I interview job candidates, I always try to include a
discussion of grammar. It's getting harder and harder to strike
up a grammar-based conversation, though. <sigh>
Me: So, what are your grammatical pet peeves?
Interviewee: Huh?
Me: You know, if you were editing me, what points of grammar
would you always catch because they sound like fingernails
across a blackboard?
Interviewee: Huh?
Me: You know... passive voice... not using possessives before a
gerund... Grammar. What are your pet peeves?
Interviewee: Idunno. Passive voice, I suppose.
Me: Okay, what else?
Interviewee: Idunno.
Me: So, can you give me an example of passive voice?
...and the conversation degenerates from there. <sigh>
And here I thought it was just me.
-Sue Gallagher
sgallagher -at- kinzan -dot- com
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