An Ode to FRNash

dcsnomo

Moderator
The very model of an amateur grammarian

(With apologies to Gilbert and Sullivan)

I am the very model of an amateur grammarian
I have a little knowledge and I am authoritarian
But I make no apology for being doctrinarian
We must not plummet to the verbal depths of the barbarian

I’d sooner break my heart in two than sunder an infinitive
And I’d disown my closest family within a minute if
They dared to place a preposition at a sentence terminus
Or sully the Queen’s English with neologisms verminous

I know that ‘soon’ and not ‘right now’ is the true sense of ‘presently’
I’m happy to correct you and I do it oh so pleasantly
I’m not a grammar Nazi; I’m just a linguistic Aryan
I am the very model of an amateur grammarian

I’m sure people appreciate my pointing out their grammar gaffes
And sorting out their sentences and crossing out their paragraphs
When you crusade for good English, it’s not all doom and gloom you sow
The secret of success is: it’s not who you know; it’s whom you know

The standards of our language are declining almost every day
Down from a peak in 18– or 19– I think – well, anyway
Pop music, TV, blogs and texting are inflicting ravages
Upon English and unchecked, this will turn us into savages

I fear that sloppy language is a sign of immorality
For breaking rules of grammar is akin to criminality
So curse those trendy linguists, lexicographers and anyone
Who shuns the model English of the amateur grammarian

Conjunctions at the openings of sentences are sickening
I wish that the decline of the subjunctive were not quickening
And that more people knew the proper meaning of ‘anticipate’
Of ‘fulsome’ and ‘enormity’, ‘fortuitous’ and ‘decimate’

I learned these rules at school and of correctness they’re my surety
I cling to them for safety despite having reached maturity
Some say that language changes, but good English is immutable
And so much common usage now is deeply disreputable

My pedantry’s demanding but I try not to feel bitter at
The fact that everyone I meet is borderline illiterate
When all around are wrong then I am proud to be contrarian
I am the very model of an amateur grammarian
 

anonomoose

New member
A very thankless job!

But if one person...just one remembers to type in "right" instead of "wright" or goes back to the board and corrects one obviously miss spelled word....then the toils of the job would have been worth it.

And someday, when I hear a broadcast journalist say " ...it was done easily...." instead of saying "...it was done easy..." then well, rest will come for an old schoolist who knows the difference between "no" and "know".

Like nails on a chaulk board, the work never ends and there are so very many paragraphs to read.

Rest easily NASH.....your numbers dwindle and the future looks gloomy....

Do they make an app for that???
 

frnash

Active member
Now that was a piece of work! — Luv'd it!

The very model of an amateur grammarian

(With apologies to Gilbert and Sullivan)

• • •

I'm going to frame it!

Ode: past tense of 'owe' (?), thus:
"I owe, I owe, so off to work I go!"

But now that I'm retarded, er … retired (!):
"I ode, I ode, so off to work I goed!" :D

Big grin.JPG
 
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dcsnomo

Moderator
I thought ode to be more appropriate than paen! :eek:

Ode (from the land ancient greek ὠδή) is a type of lyrical verse. A classic ode is structured in three major parts: the strophe, the antistrophe, and the epode. Different forms such as the homostrophic ode and the irregular ode also exist. It is an elaborately structured poem praising or glorifying an event or individual, describing nature intellectually as well as emotionally
 
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frnash

Active member
I thought ode to be more appropriate than paen [sic]! :eek:

Ode (from the land ancient greek ὠδή) is a type of lyrical verse. A classic ode is structured in three major parts: the strophe, the antistrophe, and the epode. Different forms such as the homostrophic ode and the irregular ode also exist. It is an elaborately structured poem praising or glorifying an event or individual, describing nature intellectually as well as emotionally

"I thought ode to be more appropriate than paen!" Yes, that might be too 'paen-ful'!

Mebby you meant:
"I thought ode to be more appropriate than [click ] pean!"
Pytavey, there'll be no 'pean' on my parade!

"A classic ode is structured in three major parts: the strophe, the antistrophe, and the epode."
And don't fergit the 'apostrophe'! (One of my all time "favorite's [← sic]"!) :)

(I'm not even gonna touch that 'homostrophic' business. :p )
 

mezz

Well-known member
Welcome to "Club Intellectual":confused:.... This isn't the kind of club that I thought it was:eek:. This group is too much for the "Averrrrrage Bear Boo Boo".:cool: I needs me a better edgimacation.-Mezz
 

frnash

Active member
dcsnomo, Bill O'Reilly would be proud.

Der perfesser sets high hurdles for da class. (Or is that High Hertels? Hmm …)

Welcome to "Club Intellectual":confused:.... This isn't the kind of club that I thought it was:eek:. This group is too much for the "Averrrrrage Bear Boo Boo".:cool: I needs me a better edgimacation.-Mezz

No, more like "Club Un-tellectual"! :p (Kidding, of 'coarse' [← sic]!)

Just a few gleanings from the last 24 hours (quoted here without attribution):

"Whats your area code?"
[Whats: No apostrophe?]

"… Febuary …"

"… guy on the very lift [sic] with the mic …"
[Lift: an elevator?]

"It's an AD-Bovin suspension …"
[Boivin]

"… disapointing …"
[Yes, it was!]

"my employeer"

"Doesnt …"
[A museum employee (docent)? Oh, no, just a missing apostrophe!]

"… fallen into the abyse [sic] of financial ruine [sic] …"
[Now I am sick!]

"… worth his wait in gold …"
[I guess it depends how long he had to wait!]

"… it looked phenomonal!"
[Moan!]

"Looking forward to metting up on the snow …"
[metting?]

"… there is a heard [of elk] up by Clam Lake …"
[That's what I 'herd' too!]

"Roomer has it
…"[Someone has a room or rooms to rent, and is taking in roomers?]


Watching the slow, agonizingly paynefull deth of the inglish language!
 
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snoluver1

Active member


"Looking forward to metting up on the snow …"
[metting?]



Watching the slow, agonizingly paynefull deth of the inglish language!

At least I got one of the two right. :p They say 50/50 is good odds but 50% is an F. I'm confused!!
 
L

lenny

Guest
Frank,

Maybe you just might show up to a JD banquet some year? Would be a good time to meet you, your too much!
 

skiroule

Well-known member
As one that has dangled many a participle and split way too many infinitives, I'm pretty much guilty on all of the above charges. My most serious offense is probably my favorite habit of ending sentences with "of". It's a habit I just can't cure myself of.
 
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