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Battle Viscosity sounds like a phrase that the unix console would output while compiling
- personality so big it seemed impossible for it to be snubbed out,
- The school had gratuitously allowed the Metalhead to graduate,
- the singer whaling into the microphone,
- he had free reign to annoy his friends all day,
- Steve’s viscous battle
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> "Free reign" might sound impressive to you but not to your editor or teacher.
this line from the Merriam-Webster page is cracking me up because if memory serves I used to get corrected from "free rein" to "free reign" by my high school english teachers, actually XD i'm inheriting errors from my education, how terrible
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There's perhaps more inaccurate-substitute-word comedy now, since spellcheck weeds out the not-a-word strings. Well, sometimes. By the time I've told spellcheck to skip proper names, SF terms, British idioms, non-English phrases, regionalisms and broken-word speech fragments, I'm surprised it bothers to catch any actual mis-spellings.
Then I think about how irregular and generally ridiculous English is, especially about spelling, and wonder why I'm attached to traditionally correct usage instead of progressively welcoming logical re-visioning of the language.
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Language is a tool for communication and in plenty of contexts the only important thing is getting one's message across, so errors are irrelevant. And in plenty of other contexts - like, dialects and registers - the rules of so-called standard usage are pointless pedantry. It's not just that the written medium is more standardized than the spoken, though; it's also that even when it actually doesn't matter at all from context, sometimes unintentional eggcorns (and misplaced modifiers and simple homophone and near-homophone confusions and spoonerisms...) are just funny - in fact sometimes ambiguous grammar makes phrases accidentally funny even when they're not incorrect, and there's nothing wrong with any of that.
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As for the beta issue... it's infuriating to me, but I can't deny that the cultural norms have changed. Looking at a broad cross section of the pairings and fandoms I've read lately, anyone would correctly conclude that no beta is simply standard procedure there. You'd definitely have to read for more than a few weeks before you encountered the slightest hint that beta reading was more than a rare and unnecessary accessory.