1339
Linguistics
(mander.xyz)
A place for majestic STEMLORD peacocking, as well as memes about the realities of working in a lab.
Rules
This is a science community. We use the Dawkins definition of meme.
Wrong according to... who? Who is the authority? Who granted them that power? By what mechanism can one appeal their decision?
What is "correct"?
There are standards, but you can only really say something is "wrong" or "incorrect" in relation to a particular standard. You typically wouldn't write "senator yeeted his hat lol fr" as a newspaper headline. That doesn't follow the standards for that context. But that doesn't mean it's "wrong" in some universal sense.
Correct according to who? You? Lol
Fortunately, you are not the arbiter of the English language.
That's what I was just saying to you, so I'm confused why you think that's a rebuttal.
You said things people write aren't automatically "correct" without defining what correct means.
You'll be corrected by someone with enough education to believe they are correct. English speakers police the English language in a very unorganised way.
There are no appeals. Accept that you were wrong or find a reputable style guide or dictionary that supports your position and tell the person who corrected you to get lost.
New words happen, but if you can't get the right spelling of "they're" or "their", "your", "you're" or "yaw", "its" or "it's", etc or use a unique spelling of a word I can point out in a dictionary how you're wrong
If you mismatch brackets or do odd punctuation I can point out how it looks bad or reads wrong
I'm not surprised that you're confused
You seem to be trying to be smug after you've communicated badly. Additionally, your understanding of how language works is not widely accepted.
The fact that you don't understand your argument is facile and easily undermined only highlights your lack of understanding and maturity.
Your personal opinion doesn't count as something being "widely accepted".