Authors: Dave Barry
W
e’re becoming a nation of illiterates. Ask any group of businesspeople who read a lot of job applications to name their biggest single complaint, and chances are they’ll tell you they’ve gained weight since college, even though back then they ate pizza and drank beer all the time.
But if you clarify that you are asking them about the job applications, chances are they’ll tell you that young people today have terrible writing skills. They don’t know the rules of grammar or punctuation, they can’t spell, they use tiny, unreadable fonts that look like bacteria and they’re always texting each other pictures of their private parts, which is not directly related to their writing skills but, dammit, what is
wrong
with these kids?
Who is to blame for this illiteracy? I think that we in the older generation—the parents who raised these young people—have to look in the mirror and, painful as it is, face the culprit: a combination of factors, including the Internet, reality television, “hip-hop,” global climate change and Starbucks.
But whatever the cause, it’s a big problem because writing is a crucial life skill. If you’re a recent college graduate and you send a poorly written résumé to potential employers, they’re going to throw it straight into the trash. Whereas if your résumé is well written and error free, the odds are very good that they’re still going to throw it into the trash, because the job market sucks. But they throw the well-written résumés away a little later.
That’s
the group you young people want to strive for.
“But,” I hear you whining in unison, “isn’t grammar hard and boring?”
No, English grammar is
not
“hard and boring.” That is a myth. All you have to do is learn a few simple, logical rules. Once you’ve mastered those, all you have to do is learn nineteen trillion totally illogical exceptions to the rules because otherwise you will sound like an idiot. So reflecting back on the opening sentence of this paragraph, we see that English grammar is, in fact, hard and boring. We’d better get started!
Step one is to learn:
THE PARTS OF SPEECH
The parts of speech are sometimes called the building blocks of grammar, because most of them are rectangular. The main parts of speech are:
Nouns
A noun is a person, place or thing. For example, consider this sentence:
As far as actors,
Leonardo DiCaprio
is no Marlon Brando.
In this example
,
“Leonardo DiCaprio” is a noun because he is a person whereas “Marlon Brando” is not because he died in 2004.
Exception:
Zombies, despite being technically dead, can be nouns when used grammatically in lymphatic phrases, such as:
Help!
Zombies
is eating my spleen!
Pronouns
Pronouns are words that stand in for nouns when for some reason you don’t want to come right out and say the name of the noun:
You better not let
you know whom
get a load of that hickey.
I’m not saying who dropped the air biscuit during the State of the Union speech, but his
initials are Joe Biden
.
After seven straight hours on the back of Darnell’s Harley, Marge was feeling a little funky
down there
.
Verbs
Verbs are words that describe actions.
What is all that
ruckus
?
You are
darned tooting
.
Don’t make me come over there and
open up a can of whupass
on your ass
.
Dang
it!
When Vernell found the duck sauce on his Barcalounger, he like to threw a [ke
conniption fit
.
I would describe those actions as
very unusual
.
Exception:
If no actual action takes place, the sentence does not need a verb, as in these examples:
Francine watched the entire 2010 season of
Cake Boss
.
The pitcher threw a no-hitter.
The president met with congressional leaders to discuss ways to improve the economy.
Adjectives
Adjectives are words that tell you something about a noun:
For a person of his stature,
Leonardo DiCaprio has quite a large head
.
In the 1991 movie
Critters 3
, Leonardo DiCaprio
plays a young man who locks his mean stepfather in a room with space creatures that eat him
.
The letters in “Leonardo DiCaprio”
can be rearranged to spell “A ripe raccoon dildo.”
Adverbs
Adverbs are words that end in “ly,” such as
personally
,
frankly
,
manly
and
ugly
. They are used to form parts of sentences, as follows:
Four people died from wings-related injuries inflicted during a
family
function at Chuck E. Cheese.
Bernice put a
doily
over the hamster doots.
Holy moly
, there’s mice in this lasagna.
Prepositions
Prepositions are words such as
in
,
of
,
to
,
from
,
around
,
about
,
aforementioned
and
yonder
. They introduce prepositional phrases, which are used mainly to write song lyrics:
I’ve been
through the desert on a horse with no name
.
I got passion
in my pants
and I ain’t afraid to show it.
In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida
, baby, don’t you know that I’m loving you.
She’ll be coming
’round the mountain
when she comes. / She’ll be coming
’round the mountain
when she comes. / She’ll be coming ’round the mountain, she’ll be coming
’round the mountain
, / She’ll be coming
’round the mountain
when she comes.
Round round get around
/ I get around / Yeah / Get
around round round
I get around.
Since you put me down there’s been owls pukin’
in my bed
.
Very Important Rule:
You must never, ever end a sentence with a preposition. Why? Because
Hitler
ended sentences with prepositions, that’s why. So if it appears that your sentence is about to end with one, you need to change it:
Wrong | Right |
Where is that odor coming from? | Where is that odor coming from, God damn it? |
Australia is known as “The Land Down Under.” | Australia is known as “The Land Down Underneath.” |
What up? | What up, home dog? |
Come on over. | Come on over, God damn it. |
Articles
The articles in English are
a
,
an
,
the
and sometimes
why
. Grammatically, articles are used to form permutative interjections, as in these examples:
Like I give
a
rat’s ass.
What
an
idiot.
Sam
the
Sham and the Pharaohs.
Why
, God damn it?
OK, now that we have mastered the “building blocks,” let’s see how they go together in the next section, titled:
FORMULATING A CORRECT GRAMMATICAL SENTENCE
Every sentence contains two main parts:
The
subject
, which is the subject of the sentence, and
The
predicate
, which is the other main part of the sentence.
Consider this example:
Lester wondered how come lately whenever he called Francine to find out where she was, she always claimed she was in “yoga class,” even though, number one, she did not own a yoga mat that Lester knew of, number two, he was not aware of any yoga classes in the greater Waco area that met at 2:30 a.m., not to mention which, number three, one time when he called, her a man in the background yelled, “Francine, hang up the damn phone and take off the rest of your clothes,” although Lester was leery of making a fuss about this in light of the recent situation wherein, the morning after he allegedly attended a Monster Truck rally with his brother Wesley, Francine happened to be rooting around under the front seat of his car and found a brassiere that was not remotely her size.
At first glance this sentence appears to be very complex, but when [ex,hatwe break it down into its basic components, we suddenly see how our grammatical “building blocks” work together:
Subject | Predicate |
Lester | wondered how come lately whenever he called Francine to find out where she was, she always claimed she was in “yoga class,” even though, number one, she did not own a yoga mat that Lester knew of, number two, he was not aware of any yoga classes in the greater Waco area that met at 2:30 a.m., not to mention which, number three, one time when he called her, a man in the background yelled, “Francine, hang up the damn phone and take off the rest of your clothes,” although Lester was leery of making a fuss about this in light of the recent situation wherein, the morning after he allegedly attended a Monster Truck rally with his brother Wesley, Francine happened to be rooting around under the front seat of his car and found a brassiere that was not remotely her size. |
When writing sentences, you should always follow this basic format, which has been the “backbone” of English grammar dating back to the ancient Greeks.
The Kinds of Sentences
There are four kinds of sentences:
Declarative:
Call me Ishmael.
Interrogative:
Call me, Ishmael?
Imperative:
Call me Ishmael or I will punch your face in.
Text:
ish
r u awake?
(
Picture of private parts.
)