Quote:
Originally Posted by Little Stevie
Just so you'll APEAR smart, joe, I'll make the corrections to your post here so you can change them before anyone else catches them.
"Smarter than him" should be "smarter than he" (is).
"Internet" is not spelled "internet".
Try a little more lenient approach next time. You know what they say about people who live in glass houses.
Glenn Beck may be of slightly above average intelligence but I doubt it. In addition, he has no filter between his brain and his mouth.
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I was mostly pointing out the irony of criticizing someone's intelligence while at the same time writing apears smart instead of appears. It's precisely the principle behind the old adage of people who live in glass houses not throwing stones that is my reason for pointing out the error in spelling. My grammar and spelling are far from perfect; your's may well be better. You may be right about "smarter than he" not "smarter than him". But my usage may be correct depending on who's opinion you consider to be authoritative. Apparently it all depends on whether or not you consider "than" to be a preposition.
Taken from Grammarphobia.com:
As I told a reader once before on the
blog: “Some usage gurus, including William Safire, accept ‘than’ as a preposition, and claim the object pronoun (‘me,’ ‘him,’ ‘us,’ and so on) afterward is just fine. Certainly common usage is on their side.”
As far as capitalizing internet; that also appears to be debatable. The excerpt below is taken from Wikipedia.com.
Examples of media publications and news outlets that capitalize the term include
The New York Times, the
Associated Press,
Time, and
The Times of India. In addition, many
peer-reviewed journals and professional publications such as
Communications of the ACM capitalize "Internet", and this style guideline is also specified by the
American Psychological Association in its electronic media spelling guide.
More recently, a significant number of publications have switched to not capitalizing the noun
internet. Among them are
The Economist, the
Financial Times,
The Times, the
Guardian, the
Observer[8] and the
Sydney Morning Herald. As of 2011, most publications using "internet" appear to be located outside of
North America, but the gap is closing.
Wired News, an American news source, adopted the lower-case spelling in 2004.
[9] Around April 2010,
CNN shifted its house style to adopt the lowercase spelling.
As Internet connectivity has expanded, it has started to be seen as a service similar to television, radio, and telephone, and the word has come to be used in this way (e.g. "I have the internet at home" and "I saw it on (the) internet"). For this type of use, English spelling and grammar do not prescribe whether the article or capitalization are to be used, which explains the inconsistency that exists in practice.[
citation