PSA (Pirate Service Announcement)
Aug. 2nd, 2003 02:46 pmTO: All of Pirates of the Caribbean Fandom
FROM: Anal-Retentive Memo Department (Which Has Seen This One Too Many Times Already)
RE: Execution of Priates
Pirates are hanged for piracy. Not hung. They can be hung in other ways, and well-hung at that - but if you're talking about them dangling from a rope around their necks until they are dead, that's hanged.
Thank you.
FROM: Anal-Retentive Memo Department (Which Has Seen This One Too Many Times Already)
RE: Execution of Priates
Pirates are hanged for piracy. Not hung. They can be hung in other ways, and well-hung at that - but if you're talking about them dangling from a rope around their necks until they are dead, that's hanged.
Thank you.
Oops.
Date: 2003-08-02 12:59 pm (UTC)Re: Oops.
Date: 2003-08-02 01:03 pm (UTC)Re: Oops.
Date: 2003-08-02 01:05 pm (UTC)I feel so ashamed!
Re: Oops.
Date: 2003-08-02 01:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-02 01:25 pm (UTC)Grammar's more like guidelines anyway. Arr!
Re: Oops.
Date: 2003-08-02 01:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-02 02:07 pm (UTC)This drives me nuts every time I hear it done incorrectly. I shout at the TV, at movies (sorry), at news, at people, whether they can hear me or not. Grr.
I do admit that I hate the regular/irregular verb pairs though. German, annoyingly enough, does this too, so I've got it from both my languages, and in German the reg/irreg is also tied to transitive/intransitive, though there's a rule to govern how the reg/irreg ones work and which is which in German...what a shocker.
I've spent the past 2 years getting the lay/lie set down pat in English, and much of that was learning that the "i in the word equals intransitive and irregular" rule for German actually works for this English verb. Of course, now that bothers me too, and lay/lie is used incorrectly more than it's used correctly in English, leading me to wonder if it matters at all anymore, since the usage clearly has changed utterly.
So...hang/hung/has hung for the transitive "to hang something on the wall"?
The thing that bugs me here is that hang/hanged/has hanged is also transitive (so that part clearly doesn't work with this English verb). The hang/hanged/was hanged form is, I think, used in the passive voice more than the active.
[/nattering]
I agree with
no subject
Date: 2003-08-02 03:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-02 04:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-02 04:02 pm (UTC)My only call-out was "Clap your hands if you believe in fairies!" when he got stabbed.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-02 04:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-02 04:06 pm (UTC)