Real World Grammar Usage Is Not My Cup of Tea

August 3, 2008 on 1:08 am | In Other |

Keep making the same grammar mistake over and over again and if enough of us make the same mistake, it becomes correct. The rules of grammar supposedly adapt to real-world usage. Real-world usage aside, the widespread use of “me and so-and-so” in our culture drives me nuts!

Once upon a time, we would say, “George and I went to the store.” When I was a kid, if someone said, “Me and George went to the store,” the listener would conclude that the speaker was uneducated. These days, turn on the television and the newscaster is saying, “Me and … blah, blah, blah.” Talk radio hosts say it. Heck, I’ve observed people with post-graduate degrees embracing the “me and so-and-so real-world grammar.”

I ran a little experiment while writing this article and found something even more frightening. I have intentionally included the “me and George” error and other grammatical mishaps in this article and ran it through Microsoft Word’s spelling and grammar check. Guess what? It didn’t even catch the errors!

Is this real-world grammar just the product of a narcissistic “Me, me, me society?” Are we just getting dumb? Or am I way behind the times and perceived as dumb because I am not using real-world usage?

Frankly, it’s been many years since I suffered through a semester of grammar class. I can see or hear what’s off with a sentence but do not know what the error is specifically called. So, here’s the practical, common sense rule as I understand it from second grade:

Break up the sentence to see if you are using the correct pronoun. If you’re saying “Me and George went to the store,” keep George out of it and try this: “Me went to the store.” Sounds ridiculous, eh? Conversely, split up the proper form and we have, “George went to the store,” and “I went to the store.” You can do this with a variety of sentences to easily figure out what makes the most grammatical sense.

Common sense aside, those of us who are offended by the constant “me and so-and-so” grammar can at least take comfort in the fact that pronoun variations such as “Her and me went to the store” or “Me and him went to the store” have not yet skyrocketed to the top of the common usage charts.

Now that I’ve ranted, me going to the store. Maybe George wants to go, too.

Urbain Beck is a freelance writer who has written a number of online and off-line articles and technical reports. If you have written online content and would like to show off your writing, be sure to submit some blurbs at The Blurbosphere. You’ll receive one-way links from PR2, PR3 and PR4 blogs at no charge. Visit www.blurbosphere.com for details.

- Urbain Beck

No Comments yet »

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

XHTML: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Niche Marketing