I hate the Arsenal. Both the team and their crudhouse fans putting 'the' in front of their team's name.
I've just been reading this article about Alex Pritchard: http://www1.skysports.com/football/...gland-under-21-star-get-tottenham-chance-soon.
It actualy highlights something that has been tinkleing me off for a while.
In ths piece it states: “I think Alex goes on to grace White Hart Lane,” said Warburton recently.
I've also heard (or seen) lots of posters on here saying for example, after someone misses a headed chance: 'Benteke scores that'. WTF is this all about?
These sentences belie all grammatical knowledge I have (I taught English in German adult learning centres for a year or so). When people talk in the future tense they don't seem to use necessary possibility forms such as 'if' and 'would'.
I haven't been living in the UK now for the past 8 years - is this ugly usage of the language occuring in other areas of society too? Is is this dumbed down muck simply football talk?
If it is i think we are now finally seeing the effects of having illiterate coke heads presenting shows and ex-players with the IQ of a particularly inarticulate marrow masquerading as legitimate commentators in the public sphere.
Why do we have to endure the Paul Mersons of the world when mainstream TV could quite easily employ someone such as James Richardson? Or is the average football fan really a knuckle dragging neanderthal? If so, shouldn't TV companies accept some sort of responsibility and not further impare people's ability to speak their mother tongue? If someone struggles to the point of not being able to correctly form a sentence in their own (and probably only) language then surely there is a responsibility somewhere not to let thick idiots like Merson loose on TV in front of a dim-witted and impressionable public?
EDIT: sorry, I've just noticed that I posted in the wrong forum!
And another thing..!
I've noticed the increasing use of a kind of permanent present tense in writing.
To put it in a Spurs context, sentences like -
"There's no way Levy pays £30m for Schneiderlin"
Instead of "there's no way Levy would (or will) pay £30m..."
Or similarly stuff like "if Eriksen starts we win the game".
I could be completely wrong but it strikes me as an Americanism. Anyone else come across this?
"Saved by the post"
Not so much grammar, just wrong. If the ball hits the post, you missed the target. The post did not prevent it from going in.
should have, would have, should have.
Baa, baa, black sheep, of you any wool?
People in the football world tend to now say "pro ven" rather than the correct pronunciation "proven".
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