To decanter? I don't think so!
Erez
Erez,
We are simple folk (at least I am, lest I enrage the masses). But trust me on this ...
Post a few TNs, add a few smilies and all will be forgiven.
/Jay.
We are simple folk (at least I am, lest I enrage the masses). But trust me on this ...
Post a few TNs, add a few smilies and all will be forgiven.
/Jay.
“There are no standards of taste in wine. Each mans own taste is the standard, and a majority vote cannot decide for him or in any slightest degree affect the supremacy of his own standard". Mark Twain.
Gary W wrote:TORB wrote:
Language changes and evolves, weather you and I like it or not.
Not all of us are blessed with the ability to produce 100% correct English all the time; some of us have other skills.
TORB...I hate to point this out at such a time ... but the word you need to use here is whether
GW
Ar GW,
Wots the old saing, peoples what lives in glas howses shood not walk round in the nuddy cause they will be exposed. And it looks like I have exposed myself.
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Grammar is so over rated. what is the main purpose of language? to communicate and get our point across. so who cares about grammar? If you can understand what I have to say then that's good enough. It has served its purpose.
Cheers
Rob
"The red liquid circulating in my body is actually red wine, not blood."
Rob
"The red liquid circulating in my body is actually red wine, not blood."
- Gavin Trott
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Rob wrote:Grammar is so over rated. what is the main purpose of language? to communicate and get our point across. so who cares about grammar? If you can understand what I have to say then that's good enough. It has served its purpose.
Agreed
Its also ever changing
hence, if everyone in the world starts to say
decantered
decantered it will eventually become.
regards
Gavin Trott
Gavin Trott
Rob wrote:Grammar is so over rated. what is the main purpose of language? to communicate and get our point across. so who cares about grammar? If you can understand what I have to say then that's good enough. It has served its purpose.
Well, grammar is the framework for doing that. Communicating. Would you say "What's the point of acid and tannin in wine. So long as it tastes good, who cares?" Of course you wouldn't.
Grammar amounts to the same thing. Neglecting it causes confusion. That terrific student's sentence from 'History of the World' provides a wonderful one-sentence example of the confusion (& hilarity) caused by grammatical error:
Lincoln wrote the Gettysburg address while travelling from Washington to Gettysburg on the back of an envelope.
That's funny, but you may be able to work out what it means. How about
vs"The student's reading skills were very poor"
One dumb kid or a whole generational problem?"the students' reading skills were very poor"
Without the grammar there's no communication...
cheers,
Graeme
Ratcatcher wrote:What's the diff between bottle and decanter?
ie: you put wine in a bottle you bottled it.
you put wine in a decanter you decantered it.
You use the technique of pouring the wine from a bottle to any another vessel to allow it to air and remove sediment - you decanted it.
'Bottle' is both noun and verb. 'bottled' is just the past tense of the verb 'to bottle'.
'Decanter' is noun only. The verb is 'decant', past tense 'decanted'.
Anyone got access to a decent dictionary? Does it allow 'decanter' as a verb? I'd be surprised...
cheers,
Graeme
- Michael McNally
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- Location: Brisbane
Graeme
Not sure your attempts to introduce logic and rationality to the debate will be well received (judging by the rest of this thread, you may become the object of some derision). To answer your possibly rhetorical question, the Oxford English Dictionary lists the transitive verb, "to decant", the meaning of which I am sure many of us are familiar with . The past participle is noted as "decanted". The OED does not list "decanter" as a verb, only as a noun.
Michael
Not sure your attempts to introduce logic and rationality to the debate will be well received (judging by the rest of this thread, you may become the object of some derision). To answer your possibly rhetorical question, the Oxford English Dictionary lists the transitive verb, "to decant", the meaning of which I am sure many of us are familiar with . The past participle is noted as "decanted". The OED does not list "decanter" as a verb, only as a noun.
Michael
Bonum Vinum Laetificat Cor Hominis
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Hey AJ.......
Hope you're getting as much of a laugh from this thread as I am, not that I've read all the posts. I did note that someone else used the horse analogy . Seems the dictionaries have also been getting a bit of a workout
I think this horse has run it's course and should be retired.
Erez, this issue's been aired before. Read a bit more around here before you emulate me on a high horse over the misuse of the English language.
Gavin, please lock this thread it's getting repetitive.
daz
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Being a grammer nazi from way back, I completely agree with Erez and Graham. Go guys!
No excuse for bad grammer - typos on the other hand - well no-one is perfect.
I know I'm sad but I even use correct grammer in texts.
No excuse for bad grammer - typos on the other hand - well no-one is perfect.
I know I'm sad but I even use correct grammer in texts.
Cheers,
Kris
There's a fine wine between pleasure and pain
(Stolen from the graffiti in the ladies loos at Pegasus Bay winery)
Kris
There's a fine wine between pleasure and pain
(Stolen from the graffiti in the ladies loos at Pegasus Bay winery)
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Ratcatcher wrote:With all due respect Daz this is not your forum. If you don't like a discussion, ignore it.
I don't think you actually have superior rights to the rest of us to permit you to instruct Gavin what to delete and what to leave.
I'm sure you weren't meaning to sound as supercilious as you did.
Hey Ratty, my post was meant to be very tongue-in-cheek. Sorry if you found it supercilious. No instruction was given to Gavin. Did you note the "please"?
Cheers
daz
- Andrew Jordan
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Daryl Douglas wrote::lol:
Hey AJ.......
Hope you're getting as much of a laugh from this thread as I am, not that I've read all the posts. I did note that someone else used the horse analogy . Seems the dictionaries have also been getting a bit of a workout
Hey Daz,
And I thought all I had to worry about was you! Isn't it amazing that 2 letters added to a word has caused so much interest. At the end of the day does it REALLY matter? If I had used decanted or decantered, either way everybody here understood what I meant which is all that matters.. isn't it? Why aren't we concentrating on the really important things .... like wine? Isn't this what the forum is here for anyway?? If some on this forum put as much energy in posting tasting notes and impressions as they do in giving spelling advice then we would all be better for it. If wine doesn't interest you ... go to a spelling forum and knock yourself out!
Cheers
AJ
Cabernet is ... and will always be ... KING!
AJ
Cabernet is ... and will always be ... KING!
I love how a wine forum can turn into a whine forum when the river runs dry.
I don't think that we should be too hard on people who don't write correctly. We are all friends here, or at least joined by a common interest.
After all, there is no such thing as wrong grammer. Merely grammer that is incorrect
Anyone for a drink
I don't think that we should be too hard on people who don't write correctly. We are all friends here, or at least joined by a common interest.
After all, there is no such thing as wrong grammer. Merely grammer that is incorrect
Anyone for a drink
Bartenders are supposed to have people skills. Or was it people are supposed to have bartending skills?