Grammar police take on Twitter. Good luck with that.
I love grammar and punctuation. In high school, I thought the standardized tests that asked you to correct sentences were fun. I use semicolons in text messages. My job involves proofreading. I have a visceral reaction to mangling of the English language. I don’t understand what is so damn difficult about distinguishing its and it’s, your and you’re, their and there and they’re, and I admit to judging people who seem incapable of doing so or simply don’t care.
For these reasons, the internet often pains me.
So imagine my delight in reading today’s New York Times article about people who troll Twitter for grammar and spelling mistakes and publicly chastise the guilty tweeters. I’ve had to rein in my tendency to correct or point out errors (not on Twitter, just in general), because nobody likes a critic. Luckily, fearless linguistic leaders such as Grammar Fail, Grammar Hero, Your Or Youre and CapsCop are trying to clean up the website. (Grammar Fail and Grammar Hero actually aren’t very good–i.e., as often happens, the Style section may be exaggerating a trend–but I’m more jazzed about the fight than the individual sites.)
One complaint. In a piece about valuing correct English, there is no room for this sentence:
“They see themselves as the guardians of an emerging behavior code: Twetiquette.”
Barf. Unlike “twitterati,” “tweetup,” “twitterature” and all the other obnoxious fake combination words, “twetiquette” isn’t even a clean rhyme.
The article mentions a couple of celebrity offenders, John Cusack and Kirstie Alley. I love this exchange and little zinger from the writer, John Metcalf:
“GrammarCop, one of several people who seem to exist on Twitter solely to copy-edit others, recently received a beatdown from the actress Kirstie Alley, to whom he had recommended the use of a plural verb form instead of a singular. ‘Are you high?’ Ms. Alley wrote back. ‘You really just linger around waiting for people to use incorrect grammer? you needs a life.’ (One of Ms. Alley’s people said that the actress was too busy to comment for this article.)
A life, indeed. While some of us may live to host weight-loss shows, others find solace in pedantry.”
In the comments on the article, “get a life” is a predictable refrain. “They literally need a life,” writes one reader. Uh huh. Because they are dead. And trolling Twitter from beyond the grave.
A few people express relief that at least they’re not alone, and that someone else out there still cares about grammar. (I should mention that I wrote this post in Microsoft Word first, and the grammar check suggested that I change “there” to “their.”) Brooke from San Francisco is especially eloquent:
“Do people tell mathematicians to stop being all fussy about numbers? I cringe at bad spelling, grammar, punctuation – and I’m an editor. Some people dig that precision, and we become editors. And editors are important! … No one makes fun of precision in accounting, or architecture, or carpentry — but language? Apparently we need to ‘get a life.’ I object strongly to this derision of what I take seriously. A world without editors = the New York Times reading like a Cusack tweet.”
But perhaps the most useful comment was this, from Stuart Kendall in Oakland: “It is sad that the New York Times has given credence to self-righteous twits like these jr. grammar cops. If these ninnies want to change the world, they might consider becoming real teachers rather than simply running amok with virtual rulers.”
Good idea. If people who rant about terrible grammar (that includes me) put that energy into volunteering at an after-school program or tutoring kids, that would probably have more of a real, positive impact than adding to the cacophony of 50 million tweets per day.


Salon.com
Comments
E.
Bonus points for highlighting the ridiculous ways that people use "literally" for things that are not literal AT ALL.
If you research my book and contact me through its website, a complimentary copy may be in your future.
Rated.
Great piece.
R
For a man who corrects every little mistake that he sees with such glee and condescension, I'm surprised that you didn't know that counterproductive is one word and not two. I guess even Tiger Woods misses a one foot putt once in awhile.
I agree with you, and perhaps because I taught composition and literature for thirty-five years here and overseas and from Middle School to University. People who genuinely want to teach, to help, to be engaged, teach. People who want to be pests do on Twitter what you describe here. Apparently they succeed, too, twits, yes, as they are. :)
You hardly need remind me of that, dear Stellaa.
Would that your childish mistakes, which most of us grow out of, could be dressed up as evolutionary. They are, in fact, the opposite. Good try, but sorry.
And again you assume without knowing. BBC? Where did that come from? Feel free to consider that question a rhetorical one.
I have worked with Grammar Nazis. They love to make others feel stupid. Relentlessly, they insult others by correcting them which reveals the hapless use of power.
As an English instructor, I would rather grant freedom of expression when and where the language is not meant for grading or correcting. Trolling for incorrect grammar is like waiting for Godot.
Catherine Griffiths