Losing my grammar grouch badge

scandally clad

I have been losing my grammar grouch badge. Frankly, I never really embraced the title. As early as 1972, when the first issue of Ms. magazine came out- I purchased it right away – I realized the efficacy of using the word Ms. as opposed to Miss or Mrs., in comparison with the term Mr.

I’ve embraced variations on you. Newish takes on they/them make a lot of sense to me.

Part of my learning on the topic comes from being around my wife, who taught English as a New Language, formerly known as English as a Second Language. Among other things, I realized that English is difficult and irrational; often, it doesn’t make much sense.

Actually, I knew that well before that, certainly by the time I first saw Dr. Seuss’s book The Tough Coughs As He Ploughs the Dough.

I have been listening to a lot of YouTube videos by RobWords. He takes on some of the weird variations in the language, looking at the historical as well as the current usage. He explains, for instance, in The Great Vowel Shift, why certain words that look like they should rhyme do not. (When I was doing Wordle recently and was trying to find words ending in ROWN, I immediately picked up brown, crown, drown, and frown but missed grown because it doesn’t rhyme.) Certainly, somebody who isn’t a native speaker would have real difficulty with that.

Punctuation

Still, I remember back in 2005 when a bunch of bloggers were new to me. One of them, a very smart guy, had a terrible time comparing the word its and the word it’s. Without him asking, I made it my mission to gently, firmly, and repetitively explain the difference. BTW, it did not work. I now look back at that with a certain degree of, “Boy, was I arrogant,” along with “Why are you bothering to do this?”

More recently, some folks online were lamenting that young people don’t end their sentences with a period/full stop. It wasn’t this 2021 article, but the sentiment was the same.  The subtitle: To younger people, putting a period at the end of a casually written thought could mean that you’re raring for a fight.

“To younger generations, using proper punctuation in a casual context like texting can give an impression of formality that borders on rudeness, as if the texter is not comfortable enough with the texting partner to relax. The message-ending period establishes a certain distance… Simply put, the inclusion of a formality in casual communication is unnerving.

“Think of a mother using her son’s full name when issuing a stern ultimatum.”

I didn’t say this, but I should have included that in this space of acronyms (LMAO, TY): We older folks are non-native speakers. We should at least try to speak their language, as I practiced my rudimentary French in 2023 when I was in western France.

“Every generation tends to loathe to some extent the way the generation after them speaks.”

Oh, John Green muses over Which is Correct? — or – ? And why not?

Whereforartthou

RobWords asked, Where did punctuation come from?

He makes a very good case that spaces between words are punctuation marks. Unlike the Greeks and Romans, who had to read breakeless texts mumbling aloud like a modern six-year-old, spaces and other punctuation made texts more comprehensible. We can thank, in part, the proselytizing by early Christians.

I’m pretty lax about apostrophes. Some believe the apostrophe used to show possession is a shortening of John his horse to John’s horse. This is probably not true.

“In Old English, you just stuck an S on the end of a noun to reference it as belonging to someone with no apostrophe needed.”

If you want to use a word to show the possession of the house owned by the Joneses, I don’t care if they use JONES or JONESES, with or without the apostrophe, But the one thing that does make me crazy is when they use JONE’S; you never break into the word.

Acorns, er, eggcorns
In the video, Are you getting these phrases wrong, too? | EGGCORNS, RobWords commends the linguistic skill of these linguistic pioneers.
“Decimate” now means to destroy by well greater than ten percent.  I’m okay with that.
Rob has several words that bug his readers the most, and I fully agree with their choices. The current use of unique with a comparative (more unique) grates on me.

Facebook takedown

This was ticking me off

facebookFor the second time in three days, on September 4 (re music at Chautauqua) and 6 (re my health issues), I received, within ten minutes of posting, a Facebook takedown: 
We removed your post
Updates on this decision
You’ll hear back from us soon
Thanks for requesting a review. We’ll let you know when we’ve made a decision. Most people hear back in less than 4 days, but it can take longer.
Sep 6, 2024
In review
Why this happened
It looks like you tried to get likes, follows, shares or video views in a misleading way.

Roger Owen Green
Sep 6, 2024
You shared this on your profile
This goes against our Community Standards on spam.
See rule
Policy Rationale

We do not allow content that is designed to deceive, mislead, or overwhelm users in order to artificially increase viewership. This content detracts from people’s ability to engage authentically on our platforms and can threaten the security, stability and usability of our services. We also seek to prevent abusive tactics, such as spreading deceptive links to draw unsuspecting users in through misleading functionality or code, or impersonating a trusted domain.

Online spam is a lucrative industry. Our policies and detection must constantly evolve to keep up with emerging spam trends and tactics. In taking action to combat spam, we seek to balance raising the costs for its producers and distributors on our platforms, with protecting the vibrant, authentic activity of our community.

What you need to know

How to prevent further restrictions

 

To keep people safe, we ask everyone using our technology to follow rules, such as our Community Standards, Terms of Service and relevant local laws.
By following the rules, you can help prevent your content being removed, activity restricted, or your account being suspended.
Information you shared with us in your review.
This post doesn’t break the rules
It was to raise awareness
Review submitted: Sep 6, 2024
https://transparency.meta.com/policies/community-standards/Facebook takedown
By the way, (and not that it proves anything), I’ve posted the same items on Twitter with no issues. And I took the SAME content of those posts, put it on another blog, and posted it on FB without a problem. 
I can post things to my FB, such as my Connections score, other people’s art, and a COVID PSA. 
Has Facebook decided I’m not a bot? My 9/7 and 9/8 posts received no challenge, though I never got the Facebook thumbs-up to restore the two challenged posts. Or did something malicious attach to those posts? I don’t think so. The folks at Dreamhost checked.
Dealing with it consumed time that had been previously allocated.

Sunday Stealing: 15 Questions

iptical olasion

This iteration of Sunday Stealing was purloined from a site called 200 Questions, but there are only 15 questions. If they steal another 15 questions, I don’t know WHAT I’ll call that post.

1. What shows are you into?

CBS Sunday Morning, 60 Minutes, Abbott Elementary, JEOPARDY! I record a lot of stuff but don’t get around to watching it. So when people say, “You should watch…” I nod knowingly. But I know I’m not going to add it to the queue.

2. What’s your claim to fame?

I suppose #1 is being on JEOPARDY! in 1998. Also, as my friend ADD noted recently,  “August 28th marked the anniversary of the opening of the legendary FantaCo Enterprises, a wondrous and much-missed comic book store in Albany, NY,” where I worked from 1980 to 1988. This decade, people STILL recognize me. Somehow, I’ve become the keeper of the FantaCo flame.

3. How often do you play sports?

Not all. I used to play racquetball regularly from 1983 to 2010, when the local Y closed.

4. Are you early or late?

I used to be late, but you can’t be late when you take buses. So unless I’m with someone who is late, I’m slightly early.

5. What quirks do you have?

See this blog, 2005-2024. I like to say certain words and phrases incorrectly, such as iptical olasion instead of optical illusion. Sometimes I can break into speaking like an old black minister.  The music I play has a particular order, tied to artists’ birthdays, holidays, award shows and the like.

People

6. How often do you people watch?

Constantly. On Friday, I went to the Capital District Transportation Authority office to get a new bus pass. The guy in line in front of me wanted a discounted card because he has Medicaid. He went into copious detail about how he had been in Denver and Reno, but he never got a license when he was there because he didn’t live there long enough. While he dug through his belongings, the woman helped me, but the card took about five minutes to print. So she helped the guy while finding some assistance for the people behind me who needed bus route info. Then she came out and gave me my card, my ID, and the $3 of change I was due; she was a very well-organized worker!

7. What’s your favorite drink?

A mix of cranberry and orange juice.

8. What do you hope never changes?

I have no expectations of things never changing.

9. What’s your dream car?

A self-driving vehicle powered by solar panels and stored battery energy.

10.  Where would you rather be from?

I was where I was supposed to be.

11. What songs have you completely memorized?

Lots, but The Boxer by Simon and Garfunkel immediately came to mind. But not that lame verse: “After changes upon changes, We are more or less the same.”

12. What would you rate 10/10

Massage

13. What job would you be terrible at?

Repairman

14. What skill would you like to master?

Time management

15. What movie title best describes your life?

Defending Your Life

1974 country and AC: LOTS of #1 hits

lots of pop/AC crossover

Just as in the primary Billboard singles charts, the sheer number of 1974 country and adult contemporary #1 hits is astounding.  There were 40 #1 country hits. I like doing these chart posts, but not THAT much.

So I will only list the ones that charted for two or more weeks. I’ve noted I Can Help recently and wrote about it in 2015.

Skipping the one-week #1 country songs means I miss several well-known songs. Dolly Parton has four songs in the category, including Jolene and I Will Always Love You.

A Very Special Love SongCharlie Rich, three weeks at #1; #1 for two weeks AC, #11 pop

The rest of the list was #1 for two weeks:

I Love – Tom T. Hall, #2 AC, #12 pop

Another Lonely Song – Tammy Wynette

There Won’t Be Anymore – Charlie Rich; #15 AC, #18 pop

He Thinks I Still Care –  Anne Murray; I’m surprised it didn’t cross over because I heard it a lot in the day

Rub It In – Billy “Crash” Craddock; #15 AC, #16 pop

Please Don’t Tell Me How The Story Ends – Ronnie Milsap; #95 pop

I See The Want To In Your Eyes – Conway Twitty

Adult contemporary

There were 34 AC #1 hits in 1974. Once again, I’m ignoring the ones that were #1 for a single week. I already listed A Very Special Love Song today. 

Annie’s Song and Sunshine On My Shoulders by John Denver; I Honestly Love You by Olivia Newton-John; The Way We Were by Barbra Streisand;  Love’s Theme by Love Unlimited Orchestra; TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia) by MFSB featuring The Three Degrees; Sundown by Gordon Lightfoot;  Feel Like Makin’ Love – Roberta Flack;  Laughter In The Rain by- Neil Sedaka; and Mandy – Barry Manilow were listed last month.

Last Time I Saw Him – Diana Ross, three weeks at #1; #14 pop, #15 RB 

The rest of the list was #1 for two weeks:

Keep On Singing – Helen Reddy; #15 pop

You Won’t See Me – Anne Murray; #8 pop

Back Home Again – John Denver, #5 pop, #1 CW for one week

EOS 2024 health report

From head to… knee

Here’s the EOS 2024 health report. EOS means end of summer, so no matter whether you think autumn begins on September 1st or September 22nd, you’ll agree we are getting to a change of seasons.

ITEM: I had cataract surgery on August 27th (left eye) and September 4th (right eye). It was a lengthy process. I had to go to the surgeon’s office and have several tests done about a month earlier. Then I had to get clearance from my primary care physician to  note that I’m healthy enough to have the surgery. 

The surgery itself which is actually relatively quick and efficient, probably no more than a couple hours per each eye. After each event, there’s a followup with the surgeon the following day.

I’ll still need reading glasses,albeit a different prescription, but I won’t have as many shadowy things. It’s interesting that there were two options, one of  which would have fixed my nearsightedness. Both would have required me to have glasses still. One of them was covered by my insurance in its entirety, and one would have cost $3500 per eye. Frankly, the difference didn’t seem to be worth seven grand.

The fact that we had laid out money for our daughter’s wisdom teeth removal and our cat’s medical tests shortly before he died might have colored my decision.

Drops

it was the worst part about the experience is applying the eye drops, two or three different products thrice a day for four weeks for each eye. My wife has some dry eye issues so she’s become expert at eye drops. I wasn’t so good at it, but I got better at it. I’m not expert, and it occasionally stings a little.

The eye process actually began back in January when I saw my ophthalmologist. They suggested that I needed to get a couple series of tests.  Because insurance is what it is, the simpler tests she could do and then bill it to my vision insurance. The more complicated ones she had to do six months later, in July, so she could bill it to my medical insurance. Everything is about insurance

What?

ITEM: I had a hearing test in the late spring. They determined that my hearing is actually quite decent. When they would test me for words, I could repeat them back clearly. The problem I am having is at the upper range of pitch, I might not hear certain things as well. That said, I can usually discern when my wife’s cellphone makes that buzzing sound when a new call comes in and we’re both 10 feet away. 

Regardless, I am considered a “good candidate” for a hearing aid. I’ve been reading a lot of literature about the ties between hearing loss and cognitive decline. I probably will get a hearing aid early next year

ITEM: I was having one of those First World Problems where I can’t use my electric toothbrush because it’s not working anymore. “My Sonicare won’t recharge, now I gotta brush my teeth like a neanderathal.” It’s true that I don’t brush as long as I should with a manual device. The electric toothbrush goes on for two minutes and I’m triggered to do that twice a day. It was worth buying a new toothbrush for another fifty bucks. 

I know, sad.

Pain in the… 

ITEM: My knees, as I’ve indicated before, are both bone on bone. My ortho doctor suggested back in June that I ought to do physical therapy for six weeks and see how that goes. If I decide to have knee surgery, the PT will make the recovery from a possible surgery much better.

I must admit that the physical therapy – heck, even setting up the PT – fell right off the table because of a bunch of other things, including vacations, the eye surgery, and other things mentioned here.,

So I postponed the follow up exam, but this fall I need to do PT on my knees in anticipation of having knee surgery, probably my left knee first since it is the one that hurts more.

ITEM: I am in the midst of figuring out how to either offload certain things or not worry about them. They haven’t necessarily gone away but I’ve recontextualized a little, More on that eventually.

ITEM: I got a COVID shot on August 28th at my local CVS. I’ve recently mentioned COVID in this blog at least a couple of times, and I am taking it seriously. Several people I know people IRL have experienced it in 2024, so I’m not one of those who’s pooh-poohing it. I’m pushing my wife and my daughter to do the same.

“Cases are surging in most areas of the country; emergency room visits are rising and hospitalization rates remain elevated, especially among adults 65 and older, the CDC says.” 

That’s it for now.

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