▲ | StopDisinfo910 2 hours ago | |
> The closest analogous sentence would be "Give apple", which works perfectly well as a choice to select in a textual medium. Definitely no, "Give apple" is baby talk. Completely unacceptable in a choice. That's not proper English. I will die on that hill. I'm actually shocked by the amount of people here who thinks it's acceptable and fine. > Those are not analogous. You have added a direct object without preposition, which is not standard usage in such contexts. The "apple" in "give apple" is a direct object without preposition. It's entirely analogous to what I wrote. Are you confused by the "me" in my sentence. "Me" is an indirect object here. We basically have the same sentence. It just became entirely obvious that omitting the article is erroneous as soon as you had an indirect object. It's equally erroneous without it but apparently people have somehow convinced themselves it is acceptable after years of misuse in poor computer interfaces. | ||
▲ | munificent 26 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |
> That's not proper English. There is no officially sanctioned authority specifying the English language so "proper English" is not a defined concept in any way or form. You can choose to die on that hill, but you're fighting a war that doesn't even have defined sides. | ||
▲ | danaris 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Would you like to give them the apple or the pear? ] Give Apple ] Give Pear Do you actually think this is an unacceptable and grammatically incorrect way of phrasing these provided options? > The "apple" in "give apple" is a direct object without preposition My apologies, you're correct. I mistyped—I should have said "indirect object". That does not negate any of the rest of what I said. |