|
|
|
|
|
by skipants
98 days ago
|
|
Huh. I have the opposite opinion. I'm monolingual English for all intents and purposes but I gathered that opinion from quite a few sources, including: - We had to take spelling tests in school - English speakers make (generally light) fun of other's spelling or grammar mistakes in a casual setting - In a professional setting, a lot of time is taken to proofread our own emails - There's de jure spellings for every word - Some online communities are really weird about pointing out grammar and spelling mistakes (namely Reddit) Language is meant to be a fluid, evolving thing but I always felt like English was treated the opposite way. Maybe that's also why it's the de facto Lingua Franca. I do think, and hope, that this rigidity will change thanks to AI. I've started to embrace my mistakes. I care a lot less about capitalization and punctuation in my Slack messages, for example. |
|