Grammar Discussions

Rule 6 is 19th C. Startrek resolved the issue.
Rule 3 is depatable debatable.
Rule 6 also has a comment from George Bernard Shaw "It is of no consequence whether he decides to go quickly or to quickly go or quickly to go. The important thing is that he should go at once". (On an editor at the London Times who did not like split infinitives).

There are lots of rules, missing from the table, I was taught in school; never end a sentence with a preposition. And don't start one with a conjunction.
 
Rule 6 also has a comment from George Bernard Shaw "It is of no consequence whether he decides to go quickly or to quickly go or quickly to go. The important thing is that he should go at once". (On an editor at the London Times who did not like split infinitives).

There are lots of rules, missing from the table, I was taught in school; never end a sentence with a preposition. And don't start one with a conjunction.
Muse. Churchill "Up with which I will not put! :)

 
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Rule 6 also has a comment from George Bernard Shaw "It is of no consequence whether he decides to go quickly or to quickly go or quickly to go. The important thing is that he should go at once". (On an editor at the London Times who did not like split infinitives).

There are lots of rules, missing from the table, I was taught in school; never end a sentence with a preposition. And don't start one with a conjunction.
AND, don't start a sentence with "and".
(oopsy!)
 
That's the school-rule which is old, rather than the rule from the old-school, or does it matter?
Learn Italian. They deal with this efficiently by placement of the adjective before or after the noun which makes the intention clear. :)
 
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This is something up with which I will not put!! ( grammatically correct)
Enough of this fallacy.

" While generally agreeing with many of the points made by Steven Pinker in his article (Whom knows, Review, 16 August), I should point out that in his discussion of prepositions at the end of a sentence, Pinker’s explanation of the witticism attributed to Winston Churchill– “This is pedantry up with which I will not put” – is not correct.

The verb “to put up with” is a phrasal verb (or more accurately phrasal-prepositional), and the elements “up” and “with” are not prepositions or adverbs here; they are particles which are integral parts of the verb and must normally occur in this sequence. This is the reason for the grammatical unacceptability of the witticism.

In addition, the meaning of the verb “to put up with” is not connected with the meanings of its constituents (a phenomenon often found with phrasal verbs) and thus cannot be deduced from them."


Further ref: Steven Pinker: 10 'grammar rules' it's OK to break (sometimes)
 
Enough of this fallacy.

" While generally agreeing with many of the points made by Steven Pinker in his article (Whom knows, Review, 16 August), I should point out that in his discussion of prepositions at the end of a sentence, Pinker’s explanation of the witticism attributed to Winston Churchill– “This is pedantry up with which I will not put” – is not correct.

The verb “to put up with” is a phrasal verb (or more accurately phrasal-prepositional), and the elements “up” and “with” are not prepositions or adverbs here; they are particles which are integral parts of the verb and must normally occur in this sequence. This is the reason for the grammatical unacceptability of the witticism.

In addition, the meaning of the verb “to put up with” is not connected with the meanings of its constituents (a phenomenon often found with phrasal verbs) and thus cannot be deduced from them."

I understood that! Thanks. But we are at the school class level here!
 

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