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I was just thinking about how people use ellipses way too much these days. At work, we use MSN IM a lot to communicate from one side of the office to the other. One of my coworkers uses them in about half of her messages. It makes it really hard to read her. It makes it feel like she's irritated with me most of the time. Other times, it makes it seem like she's really unsure about what she's talking to me about.I blame it all on computers. The availability of instant written correspondence has made too many people lazy and ignorant.
Some of both? I agree that schools don't stress much importance in teaching grammar, but I think the amount of communication done electronically has worsened the problem. Where letters were once well-thought-out, many people now find simple things like capitalization a hassle. The focus of getting a message out as quickly as possible just adds to the problem of society's very loose grasp on proper grammar.
Text messages aren’t full of abbreviations - typically less than ten percent of the words use them. These abbreviations aren't a new language - they’ve been around for decades. They aren't just used by kids - adults of all ages and institutions are the leading texters these days. Pupils don't routinely put them into their school-work or examinations.It isn't a cause of bad spelling: you have to know how to spell before you can text.Texting actually improves your literacy, as it gives you more practice in reading and writing.
These abbreviations aren't a new language - they’ve been around for decades.
QuotePupils don't routinely put them into their school-work or examinations.
Pupils don't routinely put them into their school-work or examinations.
I see dashes -- used in place of comma, semicolons, colons, parentheses -- used far more than ellipses -- correctly or incorrectly -- in all kinds of writing.
Dashes sort of replace parentheses (which I also tend to overuse). How do they replace semicolons or commas?
I see a lot more dashes than semicolons; there are people who are unsure what the semicolon is for.I see a lot more dashes than semicolons -- there are people who are unsure what the semicolon is for.
In Kristy's OKCupid profile there was something about the correct use of semicolons being a turn-on. I was kind of surprised to find out that she wasn't completely joking.
(Actually, the next time I revise my profile on the dating site I am on (but where I am not currently active) I think I'll put in something about the subjunctive.)