What grammatical error drives you nuts?

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People who use an I instead of a Y (tyre)

People who use a Z instead of an S (analyse)

An inability to spell centre and a mistaken belief that you can quote - since when has quote been a verb?

People asking you 'what does it say?' when you are reading something - it does not say anything, however it reads .....

People who do not know when to use 'who' and when to use 'whom'.

Of course I am a Brit so EVERYTHING I say should be taken with a pinch of salt
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Those darn dangling participles.

I found this example: After rotting in the cellar for weeks, my brother brought up some oranges. Ewwww! Leave the rotting brother down there!
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Grammer rules are just there to seperate the classes. Actual grammer is a fluid, ever changing thing. The only reason to correct someone that you understood is to make your self look better than them (teachers being an exception). I like to hear peoples persinality in how they speek an write. Besides, not once have I ever met someone that speaks perfect "King English".
 
You folks would go crazy in my house. Mispronunciation is a given with my DH and kids. My 18 year old mispronounces the word pronunciation!! She says proNOUNciation...drives me up the wall!!!!
 
Inappropriate and OVERUSE of the apostrophe. It's (it is) the dog's toy, not yours. However, I hit the dog on its nose (possessive). To see your's or our's drives me up the chalkboard !
Confusing the two forms of its is a very common mistake. It's can mean "it is" when an apostrophe is used to make a contraction, but its, i-t-s-no-apostrophe, is a possessive pronoun just like hers, ours, and yours, none of which take an apostrophe.
Additional mistakes ~~ such as: I had the egg's on sale or the horse's are loose in the yard.
 
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I had the hardest time when I moved here from England. I had to take a test to prove I could speak English before I could enroll in my classes at college. Of course the appointment was after enrollment began, so I couldn't get into any of my first-choice classes.
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I had one professor who would correct my English by writing 'in the US we would say....'. I think he was trying to be helpful, but it did not come across that way. I'm to the point now where i've forgotten some British English sentence constructions/conventions, but I don't know when i'm using the American version correctly.
 
Do not worry Cara dear, rent an English film and it will all come flooding back! We understand you are merely undercover and have not gone native
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Quote:
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We, as Americans, do not even really speak English, we Americanized the language that was English. When is the last time you saw a skunk?
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What's a biscuit, by your definition? You don't even have Oppossum's or Racoons. Worlds apart in language, and it gets on Brit's nerves so bad....we still love you!!
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My grammar lived in ne Arkansas, so did my grandpaw, so maybe that whar I learnt how to talk more gooder than most of you'ns.
 
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