Top Ten Grammar Myths
Top Ten Grammar Myths 1. You shouldn't end a sentence with a preposition Wrong! You shouldn't end a sentence with a relational word when the sentence would mean exactly the same thing assuming you left off the relational word. That signifies "Where are you at?" is off-base (or possibly irritating) in light of the fact that "Where are you?" implies exactly the same thing. Yet, there is a huge number where the last relational word is important for a phrasal action word or is important to hold back from making stodgy, unnatural sentences: "I will hurl," "We should bury the hatchet," and "What are you hanging tight for" is only a couple of models. 2. You shouldn't split infinitives Wrong! Virtually all grammarians need to strikingly let you know dividing infinitives is OK. An infinitive is an action word structure that is generally comprised of "to" trailed by an action word. A model is "to tell." In a split...