I know most people hate those of us who
care about grammar, but that aside, when I start reading what I expect is an intelligent review for productivity software, and the first thing I see in the «Summary» is a high school level grammar error all credibility goes out the window.
Use of run - on sentences just illustrates that you either don't know or don't
care about grammar.
88 % of women and 75 % of men
care about grammar most, putting it ahead of a person's confidence and teeth.
I don» t
care about grammar and all such things.
No one
cares about grammar, except when the offender is accusing others of lack of intelligence.
An online dating site did a survey which showed that 88 % of women and 75 % of men said
they cared about grammar most.
Not exact matches
As he puts it: «I'd like to CHALLENGE every woman in tech who's a) got a nice
care, b) owns a nice house, or c) is making over $ 125K a year to start thinking of themselves as the next Ron Conway or Esther Dyson in the making and commit to investing in startups...» I'll forgive him for the poor
grammar, ditto for the wisecrack a couple of paragraphs later
about how some of us might have spent $ 5,000 to $ 10,000 on our MBAs... or our wardrobes.
Actually, I really did not
care much
about the
grammar and spelling.
typos are ok... who
cares about spelling and
grammar?
learn the difference between «then» and «than» you m.o.r.o.n. or does god not
care about good
grammar?
That's a crazy statistic, and you'd think that someone who genuinely
cares about online dating would run their profile through a
grammar tool, ask a friend to look at it, or at least look out for the red squiggle.
Being ultra-careful
about spelling and
grammar will highlight your intelligence as well as the
care you have taken in sending the message.
Someone who genuinely
cares about meeting someone special will make sure they use proper
grammar in their profile and messages.
Maybe that's because nearly a quarter of the polled singles think poor
grammar means someone's uneducated or unintelligent, while
about the same number (27 percent) think that person is «lazy» or «just doesn't
care.»
She rates her «dates» on
grammar, but in the next page says she «could
care less»
about something the date says.
As things stand... you're effectually saying that all these folks suggesting
grammar corrections = self - publishers, who don't know quality — but that means self - publishers are the only ones who know or
care enough
about correct
grammar to comment, which means that self - publishers are the ones who know correct
grammar.
Proof - reading by my formatter and me before release and copy - editing on the MS I send to the formatter catches 99 % of silly stuff, and I do content editing as I write (if someone sees problems beyond punctuation and
grammar issues, I'm almost positive that they're complaining
about stylistic concerns and choices, so I don't
care).
In Ten Things I've Learned From Evaluating Self - Published Books for a Year, Bennett writes of how «self - published authors need to
care more
about grammar,» and -LSB-...]
The way a resume is structured, usage of punctuation,
grammar and spelling all indicate whether an applicant provides attention to detail and
cares about the task at hand.
You have to take
care about the English spellings,
grammar and not to use slangs.
Minor mistakes in
grammar and spelling creep in and send a major negative message: you do not
care about quality and pay no attention to detail.
What they will
care about is whether or not it uses good
grammar and spelling.