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Hibbyradge
15-11-2013, 07:58 AM
100% :smug:

http://m.staples.ca/sbdca/en_CA/cre/programs/grammarquiz/

Phil D. Rolls
15-11-2013, 08:16 AM
100% :smug:

http://m.staples.ca/sbdca/en_CA/cre/programs/grammarquiz/

Weather and whether do not sound the same where I come from. Got nowhere near 100% :boo hoo:
Can never get affect and effect right. Sound's like ill jus't have to go bak to school. Should of tried harder befowa.

Gatecrasher
15-11-2013, 08:24 AM
88% :blushie:

Jay
15-11-2013, 08:51 AM
88% embarrassed!


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD

Beefster
15-11-2013, 09:09 AM
88%.

Pretty Boy
15-11-2013, 09:16 AM
91%.

hibsbollah
15-11-2013, 11:02 AM
97%

I thought I knew 'whom' as well :boo hoo:

Dan Sarf
15-11-2013, 11:16 AM
97%

I thought I knew 'whom' as well :boo hoo:

Same here.

"Whom" is used when referring to the object of a sentence. Use "who" when referring to the subject of a sentence.

Whom would have known it?

hibsbollah
15-11-2013, 11:25 AM
Same here.

"Whom" is used when referring to the object of a sentence. Use "who" when referring to the subject of a sentence.

Whom would have known it?

I always thought it was only used when the subject had an interaction with the object, e.g; 'the yam whom I asked to stop stealing the poppies'.

Wrong again :greengrin

PeeJay
15-11-2013, 04:39 PM
... 100% ... living in Berlin hasn't ruined my English yet, then ...- :greengrin

Hibs Class
16-11-2013, 07:53 AM
100% but couldn't have explained all of the rules.

Hibbyradge
16-11-2013, 10:07 AM
I found it incredible that 24% of people got the "They could have/of arrived earlier" question wrong.

Hibs Class
16-11-2013, 01:49 PM
I found it incredible that 24% of people got the "They could have/of arrived earlier" question wrong.

Don't know why you're surprised - it was you who invited .netters to take the test!

Judas Iscariot
16-11-2013, 05:36 PM
100%

I fought it was reall'y easy

Lucius Apuleius
17-11-2013, 07:54 PM
Also 100% but all that one would expect. :greengrin

Jonnyboy
17-11-2013, 09:46 PM
100% and wouldn't have accpected any less :greengrin

stu in nottingham
17-11-2013, 11:31 PM
Won hundred.

HibeeEmma
20-11-2013, 09:03 AM
91%

So annoyed since I thought I was quite grammar savvy

Hibbyradge
20-11-2013, 12:06 PM
Don't know why you're surprised - it was you who invited .netters to take the test!

:tsk tsk:

:hilarious

Dan Sarf
20-11-2013, 01:15 PM
91%

So annoyed since I thought I was quite grammar savvy

Should have asked grandad savvy to help instead.







Groan (to save you the bother, Emma).

barcahibs
20-11-2013, 01:42 PM
100% - but for a lot of them, although I knew I was right, I couldn't have said why.

As far as I can remember my year at school was discouraged from learning any grammar rules - I can remember getting a row from my primary school teacher for (correctly!) using apostrophes to indicate possession when writing something on the blackboard (because my dad had explained it to me). According to her apostrophes were old fashioned and "not needed anymore".

This lasted right through my school years - I also remember a group of us being given a crash course on the proper use of a comma the day before our standard grade English exams - we had never been taught it before.

To this day I have no real idea on the proper rules of sentence structure - I haven't got a clue what a participle is and only really a vague idea of stuff like nouns and verbs. I know the famous star trek quote "to boldly go, where no man has gone before" is wrong for some reason, but I haven't got a scooby why. I couldn't use a semi colon properly if my life depended on it; which, thankfully, it hasn't so far.

I do remember being told to always try and avoid using the words "of" and "lots" in any sentence unless you have no other choice - but again I don't know why.

Sorry to moan, but it's always really frustrated me - It's very hard to break lessons you learnt when you were six! :greengrin

Speedy
20-11-2013, 05:10 PM
100% - but for a lot of them, although I knew I was right, I couldn't have said why.

As far as I can remember my year at school was discouraged from learning any grammar rules - I can remember getting a row from my primary school teacher for (correctly!) using apostrophes to indicate possession when writing something on the blackboard (because my dad had explained it to me). According to her apostrophes were old fashioned and "not needed anymore".

This lasted right through my school years - I also remember a group of us being given a crash course on the proper use of a comma the day before our standard grade English exams - we had never been taught it before.

To this day I have no real idea on the proper rules of sentence structure - I haven't got a clue what a participle is and only really a vague idea of stuff like nouns and verbs. I know the famous star trek quote "to boldly go, where no man has gone before" is wrong for some reason, but I haven't got a scooby why. I couldn't use a semi colon properly if my life depended on it; which, thankfully, it hasn't so far.

I do remember being told to always try and avoid using the words "of" and "lots" in any sentence unless you have no other choice - but again I don't know why.

Sorry to moan, but it's always really frustrated me - It's very hard to break lessons you learnt when you were six! :greengrin

It's fairly clear you were involved in a social experiment :greengrin

Sir David Gray
20-11-2013, 07:14 PM
91%.

I was doing really well until the e.g./i.e. one.

Allant1981
21-11-2013, 09:10 AM
100%, well chuffed

Dan Sarf
21-11-2013, 10:07 AM
100%, well chuffed

OK, so what's the difference between "that" and "which" then? If you're so clever... :greengrin

s.a.m
21-11-2013, 10:12 AM
OK, so what's the difference between "that" and "which" then? If you're so clever... :greengrin

That's the one I got wrong. I can't remember ever being taught when to use either of those, and I was surprised when I saw the explanation.

IndieHibby
21-11-2013, 10:25 AM
94%. Me and I got me, to me eternal shame...

Lucius Apuleius
21-11-2013, 12:02 PM
91%

So annoyed since I thought I was quite grammar savvy

No wahala!

The_Exile
21-11-2013, 05:52 PM
97%, gutted I never got the full monty, mind you this is stuff you start learning in primary 3 :greengrin

BroxburnHibee
21-11-2013, 06:11 PM
97%

Whom :grr:

Aldo
21-11-2013, 08:15 PM
*rattles out pram*

England wasn't my gratest subject at school

;-D

Dan Sarf
22-11-2013, 12:00 AM
97%

Whom :grr:

Meem too. :boo hoo:

heretoday
22-11-2013, 07:42 AM
100% but I was taught grammar in the sixties and it was dinned into us until we got it right.

easty
22-11-2013, 05:10 PM
Easy. 100%.

Hiber-nation
22-11-2013, 06:40 PM
91% and that's good enough :greengrin

heretoday
22-11-2013, 08:33 PM
91% and that's good enough :greengrin


91%? 91%? Good enough?

Nonsense boy. Go back and do it again!

Hibrandenburg
24-11-2013, 09:14 AM
91%.

I was doing really well until the e.g./i.e. one.

100% Picked up a wee bit of Latin which helped with that particular problem.

My German Mrs only got the weather/whether bit wrong and that probably had more to do with her being hard of hearing than grammatical incompetence.

All in all not too shabby for a school dropout like myself.

--------
27-11-2013, 01:30 PM
100%, though I would be tempted to question whether so many questions relating to the diverse meanings of homophones properly belong in a test entitled "Grammatically Speaking".

:rules:

And the link "revisit incorrect answers" should begin with an uppercase "R". I'm surprised no one else noticed that.

Hibbyradge
27-11-2013, 11:10 PM
100%, though I would be tempted to question whether so many questions relating to the diverse meanings of homophones properly belong in a test entitled "Grammatically Speaking".

:rules:

And the link "revisit incorrect answers" should begin with an uppercase "R". I'm surprised no one else noticed that.

How did you see that link if you got 100% correct?

Hibrandenburg
28-11-2013, 05:20 AM
How did you see that link if you got 100% correct?

:laugh:

--------
29-11-2013, 12:41 AM
How did you see that link if you got 100% correct?


It's on the page that comes up when you finish. :greengrin

(Note my correct usage of the word "that" in that reply.)

lapsedhibee
29-11-2013, 05:17 AM
It's on the page that comes up when you finish. :greengrin

(Note my correct usage of the word "that" in that reply.)

I was disappointed that the option "what" was not included in the question to which you refer. It was almost as if the compilers had never seen a Morecambe and Wise show.

Hibs Class
29-11-2013, 11:32 AM
100%, though I would be tempted to question whether so many questions relating to the diverse meanings of homophones properly belong in a test entitled "Grammatically Speaking".

:rules:

And the link "revisit incorrect answers" should begin with an uppercase "R". I'm surprised no one else noticed that.

Starting a sentence with "And"! Provocative but not entirely unacceptable, contrary to popular opinion. Well played!

Hibrandenburg
29-11-2013, 03:14 PM
Starting a sentence with "And"! Provocative but not entirely unacceptable, contrary to popular opinion. Well played!

Add to that his rebellious use of punctuation outside the inverted commas and I'd say "He's a bit of a grammatical tearaway."

:wink:

PercyHibs
06-12-2013, 11:14 AM
75% 😏