Talk:Guerilla non-eEnglish spelling and grammar campaign
Bravo
editI don't quite understand all of what you write, for example where sarcasm talks, but I like it a lot. I'll tell you why. First of all, I've followed some not-so-nice behavior by at least one user who feels the need to discourage non native English speakers from contributing. This behavior is ridiculous and unhelpful. The second bit is that I know people in professorial positions who repeatedly and annoyingly mess up their, they're, and there. Very few (including me) English speakers understand past tenses, and I have found that non native speakers are superior in that field. Keep up the good work. Swilk 18:13, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
As an Englishman, it's a common thing for me to come across foreigners whose English I cannot find any flaws in anywhere apologising for their "poor" English, while the spelling (and discrimination between homophones - their, they're etc) of half of the native English speakers I know is simply cringeworthy. Screaming at non-native speakers for making mistakes because they're non-native speakers thus betrays something of their insular outlook on the world. I would certainly get annoyed if a German monoglot insulted me as an "idiot" for making mistakes in my German simply because I'm not a Muttersprachler! And so I can only commend User:notafish for her courage to stand up to such idiots :)
Incidentally, I think I shall take the spirit of this in mind and start contributing more boldly to the German wikipedia :) Hairy Dude 03:03, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
Scotch versus Scots
editScotch is a drink. You meant Scots.
- I'll be sure to pass your suggestions on to en:Alan Jay Lerner. 86.6.4.56 19:25, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
Please be more specific
edit"Norwegians learn Norwegian ; the Greeks are taught their Greek"
- (1) When you write 'Norwegian', do you refer to the Bokmål or the Nynorsk variant of Norwegian?
- (2) When yoy write Greek, do you refer to the Demotiki or the Katharevousa variant of Greek?
Tread lightly; you could make quite a lot of people in Norway and Greece quite angry quite by mistake. (In other words, I suspect that the author realizses that the English speakers are not the only people who are a bit ... Sorry, I was close to make a deterogatory statement about half a milliard/billion people.)
(Unsigned by JoergenB, since the en.Wikipedia account doesn't seem to work here???)
- Ditto. 86.6.4.56 19:25, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- I will always remember my Greek professor, who when we made a mistake would say "Always remember, every retarded person in Greece knows how to do this."--Mrcolj 19:40, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
Background: Poor language skills
editA 2003 discussion from en.wiki village pump, with some additional comments by Anthere and Angela. --Nemo 13:59, 17 August 2010 (UTC)