On Sat, 05 Apr 2003 08:01:12 -0600, you wrote:
>At 10:34 AM 4/5/2003 +0100, you wrote:
>>Dear All
>>
>>In case anyone is still reading, the quote in the NY Observer was: "No one
>>would have believed it if it did not happen ..." since you have already
>>gone the perfect tense with the conditional clause at the start of the
>>sentence, convention has it that the second, dependent clause go into the
>>pluperfect: "No one would have believed it if it had not happened..."
>>Although American convention has diverged from the English, I remain
>>convinced the original makes more sense in terms of consistency of time in
>>written or spoken language - especially in reported speech.
>>
>>If you have reached this far... thank you for "listening" ;-)
>>
>>Chris
>
>Yes, Chris, this sort of usage is very poor and it's on the increase. In
>the papers some of it is prevailing because reporters now tend to quote
>absolutely verbatim rather than correct the grammar silently for print.
>Unfortunately, it would be easier for us just to start another war ...
If it were prevailing in quotes reported in the newspapers, I wouldn't
find it so grating.
IMO, it's prevailing because over here in Leftpondia we haven't been
properly instructed in English since 1776 or so. At the time, there
was some issue of patriotism involved (or was that only the spelling
in the first Webster's. That's some excuse fer a lout who couldn't
spell, innit?). Unfortunately the effects have been allowed to
propagate, so that we now speak a language which is only loosely based
on English.
And lately it seems that we aren't even being properly instructed in
American.
Make grammar, not war!
B
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