Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:39 AM I hate it when the recorded voice says, "Please listen CAREFULLY to the following choices..." I always want to shriek, "No, I'll blinking well listen as carelessly as possible!" |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: EBarnacle Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:36 AM One which constantly gets my grits is "you have reached xyz. I am not in now. Please leave a message..." If I had reached xyz, I would not have to leave a message. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Deckman Date: 24 Jul 12 - 12:24 PM "Up the down staircase" |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 24 Jul 12 - 11:31 AM A woman of my acquaintance was complaining to me of the sommelier in the resort where she worked. Evidently the waiters were very busy and instead of helping, "And there he was, just standing on his a**." |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: MGM·Lion Date: 24 Jul 12 - 11:16 AM Saul ~ If, in the 11·x·'had' sentence, you substitute 'written', for the 2nd 'had' and the 5th 'had', and 'received' for the final, 11th one, and then read it out loud, you will find it makes perfect sense, without significantly altering the meaning. ~M~ |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: saulgoldie Date: 24 Jul 12 - 10:59 AM I protest that multi-"had" sentence as a mere exercise. I mean, does it actually have any meaning? If one said it to a normal person... Garbled sin-tax? Like if there was a levy on prosyletution? Saul |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 24 Jul 12 - 10:53 AM This might tie in with the thread about Men And Washing Machines, or even the thread about Racism in The UK (We actually reckon some East Europeans whisked it away in their van; they were in our village 5 mins before, putting those scam charity sacks through the doors) |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 24 Jul 12 - 10:49 AM We had a washing machine stolen from our front garden yesterday. (We were going to dispose of it anyway; it was worn out.) My neighbour was telling her husband when he arrived home from work. They stood in our garden and she said, "And there it was Robert...GONE!" |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: beeliner Date: 24 Jul 12 - 01:07 AM From The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime by Mark Haddon: "His face was drawn but the curtains were real." |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: MGM·Lion Date: 23 Jul 12 - 11:09 AM Housepoint, Amos. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Midchuck Date: 23 Jul 12 - 10:52 AM Here's a classic involving a misplaced comma. A panda walks into a bar, pulls out a gun, kills the bartender and walks out. Everyone knows a panda eats, shoots and leaves. Actually, the original joke involved a Panda visiting a prostitute and failing to pay. Really. Peter |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Amos Date: 23 Jul 12 - 10:51 AM Smith, where Jones had had "had", had had "had had"; "had had" had had their teacher's approval. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: John P Date: 23 Jul 12 - 10:37 AM My ex had a poetry instructor who told his students on the first day of class that he didn't want to see any poems with the syntax tortured to make it fit the rhythm and rhyme scheme. He said that was something "up with which I will not put." |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 22 Jul 12 - 08:13 PM To paraphrase someone else: The least you can do is nothing. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 22 Jul 12 - 04:58 PM Some people get paid to be good, but I'm good for nothing. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Doug Chadwick Date: 22 Jul 12 - 07:13 AM Jack and Jill. There are spaces between Jack and and and and and Jill. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: MGM·Lion Date: 22 Jul 12 - 05:09 AM One is reminded of the old puzzle as to how to punctuate the following to make sense: Smith where Jones had had had had had had had had had had had their teacher's approval ~M~ |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 22 Jul 12 - 04:32 AM That's the title of a very funny English usage book by Lynn Truss. (I can recommend it) Another example of incorrect punctuation is the sign outside a barber's shop: "What do you think? I'll shave you for nothing!" Which should have read: "What? Do you think I'll shave you for nothing?" |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Neil D Date: 21 Jul 12 - 11:09 PM Here's a classic involving a misplaced comma. A panda walks into a bar, pulls out a gun, kills the bartender and walks out. Everyone knows a panda eats, shoots and leaves. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 21 Jul 12 - 04:24 PM Thanks, y'all. No, I don't have a recording. My brother and I once tried recording some of my songs but we made such a botch of it that we ended up laughing helplessly. One of us would forget a word or line or the other would forget to come in on cue, and on and on - we had a lot of fun but no, I don't have a recording. lol |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: gnu Date: 21 Jul 12 - 04:11 PM Ebbie... beeeautiful! I am with Crowhugger. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Crowhugger Date: 21 Jul 12 - 12:11 PM Love the thread! Ebbie have you an audio or video recording of your song? Would love to hear it. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 20 Jul 12 - 12:14 AM Thanks, Bert. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Bert Date: 19 Jul 12 - 10:39 PM Great song Ebbie. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Bernard Date: 19 Jul 12 - 07:19 AM Are you the front end of a donkey? No! Are you the back end of a donkey? No! Then you must be no end of a donkey! |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: MGM·Lion Date: 19 Jul 12 - 07:14 AM A friend of mine said she found the two instructions on a bottle, "Keep away from children. Do not drink", and remarked that she would find the second injunction easier to obey if she could only think of some way to accomplish the first. ~M~ |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,Dáithí Date: 19 Jul 12 - 06:15 AM A couple of favourites: Medicine labels saying " Keep away from children" - always good advice in my opinion! And the signs you see up and down motorways ,"Road Works Ahead" - am so glad that it does... d |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 19 Jul 12 - 12:23 AM I forgot about posting this (sorry it is so long). Thanks for asking. Sun and Rain Elva Bontrager 1998 As I dwell on the memories of so many years And on the lives of most people I know It surely does seem that we learn from extremes Let me show you that it's really so There is sun, there is rain, there is pleasure, there is pain There is friend, there is foe, there's the stranger that I know Laughter and tears, hopes mingled with fears The joy and the grief, the rapture and woe There are giggles and sighs, hellos and goodbyes So many of each in our lives Promises broken and words left unspoken Things idolized or despised Anger and gladness and happy and sadness The loves and the hates, the births and the fates The pathway supernal, the broad road infernal The blink of a day a thousand years away Through the years I could see my life blown by the wind Soaring high and then dashed to the ground Finally I wondered just how much I'd squandered Having every wind that blows toss me around A good man's not always right nor the bad man always wrong Things are not always black or white as I'd thought my whole life long Instead of haste I've learned patience, deep gratitude for questions The answers can wait. That, at last, I have found I don't know all the reasons for life's changing seasons But whate'er they may bring is what must be So in all of my dreams, through all life's extremes I'll take each moment and let it shape me I'll take the sun, face the rain, take the pleasure, bear the pain Love the friend, love the foe, love the stranger in my home Life's extremes are the means, fertile seeds that we need To live and to love, to give and to grow. Yes, there's anger and gladness and happy and sadness The loves and the hates, the births and the fates The pathway supernal, the broad road infernal The blink of a day a thousand years away The blink of my day a thousand years away |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: MGM·Lion Date: 18 Jul 12 - 04:18 AM "Oh, nobody goes there any more. It's much too crowded." |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: MGM·Lion Date: 18 Jul 12 - 03:41 AM I used to love the instruction on the lid of a particular make of jam ~ Robertson's or Hartley's I think ~~ To open, pierce with a pin. Then push off. Always reminded me of fireworks: "Light the blue touch paper and retire". ~M~ |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 18 Jul 12 - 03:10 AM Some more from Lost In Translation:- Madrid restaurant:- Our wine leaves you nothing to hope for. Japan hotel:- If you want more heat or cold in room, please control yourself. and... Please take advantage of the chambermaid. Rome hotel:- Please dial 7 to retrieve your auto from the garbage. Heathrow Airport, UK:- No electric people carrying vehicles beyond this point. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: framus Date: 17 Jul 12 - 11:10 PM Big brother (as a child) was referred to by our Grannie as a half-wit (we didn't muck about in Derry!) Quick as a flash, the response "Well you're a whole wit, then!". |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Becca72 Date: 17 Jul 12 - 02:47 PM LOL Eliza. Reminds me of the time I was out to dinner with the 'rents. Sign on the buffet read "Steamed baby clams". I asked Kendall what got them so angry... |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 17 Jul 12 - 02:41 PM There's a super little book calles Lost In Translation. There are some real howlers in there. eg Sign in hotel room in Finland:- "If you have a fire, shut the door and expose yourself at the window." I like the signs one sees on security doors in shops: This Door Is Alarmed! (I wonder what frightened it?) |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: BrendanB Date: 17 Jul 12 - 12:28 PM "I've got a really busy day tomorrow. I'm having two teeth taken out and a gas fire put in". |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 17 Jul 12 - 11:41 AM He said, "Yes, I have a lot of words in my mouth!" Bill D That reminds me of a precocious little boy who once asked me to sing something. I did and then he said, Now let's sing the song that's in my mouth. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: gnu Date: 17 Jul 12 - 11:41 AM Jts... a greeting from a Newf I knew years ago... "Whatchya got in yer mout me ol cock?" |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: saulgoldie Date: 17 Jul 12 - 11:01 AM Misplaced modifiers, words that are nearly but not exactly the word one intended, abused words, over-used words. Oh, and mispronunciation. It's "noo-clee-ir," stupid! Yeah, all that. And...failure to use the semi-colon. Save the semi-colon! Hope itsa long thread! Saul |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Bill D Date: 17 Jul 12 - 10:57 AM 25+ years ago, my son, at about 3½, made some remark using a word that surprised us. Pleased, we complemented him on how well he said it. (details long forgotten, but not his response: ) He said, "Yes, I have a lot of words in my mouth!" ------------------------------------ My college German professor told of a small boy objecting to his father's choice of a book for a bedtime story: "Daddy, why did you bring that book I didn't want to be read to out of up for?" |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Becca72 Date: 17 Jul 12 - 10:46 AM When something around here goes missing "and there is was, lost" |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: John MacKenzie Date: 17 Jul 12 - 10:37 AM I've just about reached breaking point, he snapped. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Mr Happy Date: 17 Jul 12 - 10:01 AM Can you bring that book about Down Under up? |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Jim Dixon Date: 17 Jul 12 - 08:59 AM Throw the cow over the fence some hay. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Jack the Sailor Date: 17 Jul 12 - 08:37 AM Last night I shot an elephant in my pajamas! |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: John MacKenzie Date: 17 Jul 12 - 06:26 AM Jings, is there naethin' they wullnae tax? |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Megan L Date: 17 Jul 12 - 03:31 AM Dad used to say "I may no be right here but ahm certainly no aw there" And I did once catch a member of my first aid team asking someone who she had seen kicked in a sensitive place by a clydesdale "Are you allright" |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 17 Jul 12 - 03:23 AM "Was it you or your brother was killed in the war?" framus lol |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Jack the Sailor Date: 16 Jul 12 - 08:34 PM There are a bunch of Newfoundland jokes based on a similar premise. A guy phones the Salvation Army. "Do you save fallen women? "Good! Save me two for Saturday night." |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 16 Jul 12 - 08:25 PM me too, me too! |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: katlaughing Date: 16 Jul 12 - 07:24 PM I agree, Bert! C'mon, Ebbie! (Great thread!) |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Bert Date: 16 Jul 12 - 07:15 PM OK, let's hear that song Ebbie! |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: framus Date: 16 Jul 12 - 07:07 PM Was it you or your brother was killed in the war? |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 15 Jul 12 - 09:52 PM In a song I called 'Sun and Rain', that I wrote a number of years ago I spent days pairing up words/concepts as close to opposite as I could get. For instance, there is a distinct if subtle difference between joy and rapture as well as between grief and woe, so the line became "the joy and the grief", "the rapture and woe". It went on with "pleasure and pain","giggles and sighs", "hellos and goodbyes", "promises broken and words left unspoken", "births and fates", etc. I spent a lot of time on it but I was quite proud of how it developed. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Ebbie Date: 15 Jul 12 - 02:49 PM Hey! I already love this thread. |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 15 Jul 12 - 01:05 PM "The difference between the right word and the nearly right word is the difference between the lightning and the lightning bug." . . . Mark Twain |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 15 Jul 12 - 12:58 PM Like the table for a lady with mahogany legs? Or a black man's T-shirt? I also like my mother's favourite; "She smiled, that's all she said." |
Subject: RE: BS: Garbled Syntax From: GUEST,999 Date: 15 Jul 12 - 12:44 PM These types of things are what make the language beautiful, all the way from "stay where you're to 'til I get where you're at" to "Thanks, but I don't want no potatoes." |
Subject: BS: Garbled Syntaxis From: Ebbie Date: 15 Jul 12 - 12:22 PM I like words. I love words. Finding a word with just the right shading to it and setting it at just the right spot is a thing of deep pleasure to me. That said, I also enjoy the inadvertent mixing of metaphor and the accidental blurt, of which I am frequently guilty. (Yesterday I told a tenant that 'Greg',the maintenance man, had not answered my phone call and that I would try to call 'Wayne' who might know where Greg was. The tenant says, Who is Wayne? Is he the other Greg?') (Most of the members of my large birth family resemble each other in one or more particulars. At a function one day, a woman came up to my sis Ida and said, pointing to the retreating figure of my other sister: "Are you Linda or is that you over there?" We told her that she should have assured her, "No. That's me over there.") My local paper this morning has this gem: "Wandering down the trail, just past the old parking lot, is another interpretive sign." |