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That makes sense as far as it goes. Joel Send a noteboard - 05/10/2011 09:02:42 PM
Since I noticed you both (in effect) cited the same objection: Subject/verb agreement. I (perhaps incorrectly) took "Twitter and texting" to be examples of a single general phenomenon suspected to have "eroded proper grammar for today's youths" and so thought nothing of introducing the question with "has." My logic is expounded at better length here, in an About.com entry written by one Richard Norquist, whose bio there states him to be a Doctor of English with 35 years experience teaching composition:
Normally a subject made up of more than one element takes a plural verb ("The President and Congress are at loggerheads"), although occasionally, when the elements add up to the same idea, the verb is singular ("The wear and tear on the car was tremendous"). But focus an eye on these compound subjects followed by singular verbs, all of which are correct:

Everything in the cupboard and everything on the table was smashed.
Everybody favoring the plan and everybody leaning toward it was interviewed.
Nobody in my house and nobody on my street has been robbed.
Anyone who has read the book and anybody who has even heard of its ideas agrees with the author.


Strange, eh? . . . The explanation would seem to be that in each instance the second 'particularizer' is superfluous and has no grammatical efect; it could just as well be omitted, and in some of the instances the and would change to or. . . .

"An odd quirk that proves nothing aside from the fact that some rules do have exceptions."
(Theodore Bernstein, Miss Thistlebottom's Hobgoblins, 1971)

Bolding is mine, for emphasis (and yes, I noticed that he mispelled "effect." Several of the examples here, the first especially, are similar to the language in question eight: "Everything on the table" and "everything in the cupboard" are clearly and wholly distinct groups, but a singular verb is used to reference the singular destruction of both groups.


In the examples used in the quoted piece, you are talking about two distinct groups, but the key is that they both begin with the same qualifier, the same key to the subject -- everything on the table and everything in the cupboard. They are expanded into two groups, but they are part of the same root -- everything. It could just as easily be stated as "everything on the table and in the cupboard was smashed." The verb, "was", depends on the true subject, which is "everything", which is singular. In that case, "everything" has been expanded into two sub-groups, but they are still part of the same singular subject. It is the same with the other examples he used.

In the case of "wear and tear", that has come to be regarded as singular simply because they are always used together, they are partners in crime, they form a singular idea, as he noted. "Twitter and texting" are not at that point where they would generally be accepted by society as representing a singular idea, regardless of whether or not DK meant them as a singular idea.

That's my take, anywho.

It makes the rule somewhat subjective though; "wear and tear" are past a tipping point where the related concepts are generally regarded as elements of a single one, while "Twitter and texting" are not, despite the fact that some (e.g. DK and I) already regard them that way.
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Grammar junkies - 05/10/2011 06:46:31 PM 1143 Views
I'm not always sure that I'm correct, but.... - 05/10/2011 07:04:13 PM 837 Views
I didn't see any errors - 05/10/2011 07:24:27 PM 821 Views
Re: I didn't see any errors - 06/10/2011 03:14:07 PM 700 Views
You mean ... - 06/10/2011 03:58:32 PM 787 Views
Must ... have ... grammar. - 05/10/2011 07:53:34 PM 1015 Views
For you and Tom as well, the same question about question eight. - 05/10/2011 08:33:39 PM 1300 Views
Tom can probably give you actual terms and correct rules, but here's my take on it. - 05/10/2011 08:43:47 PM 787 Views
That makes sense as far as it goes. - 05/10/2011 09:02:42 PM 824 Views
But do you actually regard them that way? - 05/10/2011 09:08:36 PM 806 Views
Yeah, pretty much. - 05/10/2011 09:25:18 PM 767 Views
Re: Yeah, pretty much. - 05/10/2011 09:29:33 PM 649 Views
OK then. - 05/10/2011 09:59:50 PM 811 Views
You bring up a point that I was researching the other day - 05/10/2011 08:53:40 PM 859 Views
You guys mean a hyphen, not a dash. - 05/10/2011 09:00:25 PM 818 Views
You're right of course! - 05/10/2011 09:13:44 PM 883 Views
I frequently am. - 05/10/2011 09:16:38 PM 892 Views
So I've noticed. - 05/10/2011 09:19:38 PM 804 Views
I like telling people, too. - 05/10/2011 09:34:50 PM 799 Views
You can use charmap. - 05/10/2011 10:21:32 PM 850 Views
Re: You guys mean a hyphen, not a dash. - 06/10/2011 01:15:02 PM 747 Views
Mmm, dashing. - 05/10/2011 09:02:53 PM 800 Views
Emdashing is an entirely different form of punctuation. - 05/10/2011 09:07:36 PM 871 Views
Achtung! Grammatik! :insert Nazi-saluting smiley as the Wehrmacht marches by: - 05/10/2011 08:10:45 PM 915 Views
I love this bit. - 05/10/2011 08:26:52 PM 900 Views
Bring back the BSG! - 05/10/2011 08:55:32 PM 836 Views
Re: your 2nd irritating error for question 2 - 06/10/2011 04:12:49 PM 772 Views
Good poll, especially for this site. - 05/10/2011 08:11:10 PM 924 Views
Re: serial comma. - 05/10/2011 08:31:58 PM 802 Views
Maybe I was being a little anal there. - 05/10/2011 08:35:33 PM 775 Views
Same here - 05/10/2011 08:43:34 PM 680 Views
I think it's conventional to use a comma before "etc". - 05/10/2011 08:55:11 PM 755 Views
Re: Grammar junkies - 05/10/2011 08:33:06 PM 815 Views
Re: Grammar junkies - 05/10/2011 08:49:43 PM 875 Views
People should talk in a way that can be understood, else they are not communicating. - 05/10/2011 09:17:37 PM 865 Views
Re: "everyone's". ~winky~ *NM* - 05/10/2011 09:22:18 PM 398 Views
Is it time for my lecture on superfluous apostrophes again? - 05/10/2011 09:43:47 PM 774 Views
You mean your lecture on "superfluous" apostrophes. - 05/10/2011 09:53:31 PM 717 Views
As have I. Multiple times. *NM* - 05/10/2011 09:55:08 PM 381 Views
I am not stubborn, just true to my convictions. - 05/10/2011 09:56:39 PM 967 Views
Unsurprisingly, I don't really agree with you at all on this point. :p - 05/10/2011 10:29:59 PM 859 Views
I do not really think I am "right" on this one so much as "not wrong." - 06/10/2011 12:01:36 AM 778 Views
But contradictions are inherent in the entire English language! - 06/10/2011 01:25:39 AM 767 Views
Sure, but not deliberate ones created by grammarians who know better. - 06/10/2011 05:40:58 AM 780 Views
I'm going to listen to the others. - 06/10/2011 06:17:18 AM 787 Views
Like I say, I appreciate exceptions when justified (and again, only claiming to be "not wrong." ) - 06/10/2011 07:26:18 AM 677 Views
But you are wrong - 06/10/2011 02:17:40 PM 813 Views
that is OK he is very good at being wrong *NM* - 06/10/2011 03:43:23 PM 411 Views
I disagree. - 07/10/2011 12:15:14 AM 756 Views
How utterly unsurprising - 07/10/2011 02:21:38 PM 735 Views
"We want to be nothing if not persistent." - 07/10/2011 02:39:19 PM 783 Views
Doesn't matter. - 07/10/2011 03:12:14 PM 794 Views
What. - 06/10/2011 06:17:41 PM 861 Views
You called? - 05/10/2011 08:53:54 PM 851 Views
Grammar schmammar! - 05/10/2011 09:01:47 PM 884 Views
Wongy tip #77 - 05/10/2011 11:15:12 PM 749 Views
#1) I do not use NetSpeak while playing games, texting or using social media. - 05/10/2011 11:34:12 PM 752 Views
What about NateSpeak? *NM* - 06/10/2011 04:01:08 PM 367 Views
I did use that once to tell the story of you and CNRedDragon going to see Ice Princess. *NM* - 07/10/2011 01:46:50 AM 388 Views
A timeless classic. - 07/10/2011 01:53:36 AM 725 Views
Re: Grammar junkies - 06/10/2011 01:17:28 AM 777 Views
Yes. - 06/10/2011 06:53:46 AM 715 Views
I forgot about "of" for "have." - 06/10/2011 07:31:11 AM 754 Views
I try - 06/10/2011 09:18:29 AM 808 Views
I freebase split infinitives on a regular basis. - 06/10/2011 01:53:36 PM 683 Views
The split infinitive is not grammatically incorrect. - 06/10/2011 02:04:34 PM 772 Views
I wish more people knew this. - 06/10/2011 07:38:46 PM 708 Views
Junky Grammar. - 06/10/2011 04:24:01 PM 706 Views

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