It certainly is. Every estuary speaker knows that it should be "I got it off of me mate"FFS.Now you are talking nonsense "I got it off me mate" is bad English
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That should be "I got it from my mate", so you're confusing the issue.
Otherwise its I or me as you say, and I have never heard of this "polite" substitution.
It certainly is. Every estuary speaker knows that it should be "I got it off of me mate"
... split infinitives ...
It certainly is. Every estuary speaker knows that it should be "I got it off of me mate"
It takes some practice if you are comfortabable square on the bottisit to learnabole the intrickeries of the diadodode...Oh Joy ! Marbelode !
For dedicated scholars of Unwinese there is an online Unwinese Dictionary available.
While we're slagging orf the plebs, why is it that people who haven't pronounced the letter "H" on the front of any word that is written with it in their lives then insist on pronouncing one at the start of the name of the letter - where there isn't one?
That is definitely a northern thing, calling "H" a "haitch" instead of the correct "aitch".
I would once have assumed poor education, but I have heard Professor Brian Cox say it.
That is definitely a northern thing, calling "H" a "haitch" instead of the correct "aitch".
I would once have assumed poor education, but I have heard Professor Brian Cox say it.
I thought it was "orf me mate"...
The "rules" about split infinitives have long been deprecated. ... Both were the products of incorrect publications.
Not according to some chap on Radio 4 a couple of days ago: he reckoned splitting infinitives was absolutely incorrect. I can't remember his name but it was a discussion rather like this thread and he represented the traditional expert vs the "if you can grasp the gist it's ok, like" approach. Obviously correct if on R4![]()
Indeedto occasionally slip them into my writing ...
Yes if you are speaking Latin, but we're not. I have found English dictionaries which allow "fora" as a plural but never one that prefers it over "forums". By the way - would you correct the "which" in my previous sentence to "that"? Most editors would I think. I can't work out whether this is a Scottish construction in my language or whether I'm just wrong, but things I write always come back from editors with most of the whiches turned to thats.Plural of the noun "forum" which has neuter gender.(AFAIR)
One of you got the joke![]()
Sorry, but I don't think so! I was taught at school (a long time ago) to use 'I' as it is deemed more polite.
You should sue. You were misinformed.