I love that exchange because it's a rare instance of someone using the word "literally" correctly, and not, as the current trend seems to be, as a synonym for "really" or "very." (For example, when someone says, "I literally blew my top" when what they really meant was, "I really blew my top.")
I've been feeling very anal with regard to language lately, since I seem to notice typos and misuse of language all over the place. I feel like the grammar equivalent of that kid in The Sixth Sense: I see typos. They're everywhere, and most of them don't even know they're typos.
For example, our library is hosting a bunch of posters in celebration of Black History Month. Since I'm on the Diversity Education Committee, I volunteered to hang them. When the posters arrived, they looked great: large glossy foam board pictures of various African Americans with a small text about who they were/are. Then, as I was hanging them, I made the mistake of actually reading the text. Here are some of the errors I noticed:
- Rosa Parks was not a "42 year seamstress" during the famous bus scene; she was a 42-year-old seamstress.
- W.E.B. DuBois was not a "civil rights leaders", he was a civil rights leader.
- Louis Armstrong was not "still with in band" when he died, he was still with his band.
- And the granddaddy of typos: Phyllis Wheatley's book did not have a forward "sign by" John Adams, she had a forward signed by John Adams.
Then this week I received an email from our human resources department. They're advertising a new position. Ironically, it's a position as a remedial English instructor. The job description reads, "...three year's of teaching experience..."
I thought of pointing out this "typo" to the person who sent the email, but then I think, I don't want to be that guy. The one who's always correcting other people. If they find a remedial English instructor who doesn't notice that mistake, I guess it'll be a match made in Heaven. Literally.
[And for my irony-impaired readers, that was an intentional misuse of the word "literally."]
1 comment:
You need to literally read "Eats, Shoots and Leaves." Not because you will learn anything new, but because it will make you feel better to hear (figuratively) someone else rant about this.
I still think it is funny to put "literally" in places where it is obviously wrong, as a joke, like, "He literally had a cow." But, invariably, people either don't understand that it is incorrect, or do, and don't get that it was an intentional joke. So, I give up. Maybe it wasn't that funny anyway.
Post a Comment