What a brilliant name cooberpedi.
I've been thinking about this more overnight. I have always expected people to think I'm common because of the way I speak and the little I know about grammar (for instance, I had to look up parsing after reading the previous post). I'm used to that and it doesn't matter to me a bit. Shame on them really.
What I didn't realise is that they might stop paying attention or think I have a low IQ when I get it wrong. What a shock! I don't immediately think something is correct if it is well written so why should the opposite be true?
Because I've studied at a botanical garden I know the Latin names for plants. If someone calls a daisy a daisy I don't assume they know less about it or enjoy plants less than someone who calls it Bellis perennis.
Just because someone hasn't had the benefit of the education others obviously have, it doesn't mean they can't learn or have a lower IQ. Angela Rayner is bright as a button - she just didn't have the advantages some seem to assume are available to all. Believe me, my council estate comprehensive in the 1970s wasn't the place to learn about prepositions - rather it was a case of getting your head down, not getting your glasses smashed and looking forward to the day you could leave.
My mum's education was almost nil thanks to the war and ill health. When she retired from her job as a school cleaner she went to evening classes (which she called night school) to take O and A levels. She drank it all in an worked like a navvy. When she achieved an A in O level English I believe it was the proudest day of her life. We were so proud of her. Mum went on to have a book published which was sold and raised thousands for the charity Animals Asia.
Please don't stop listening just because someone doesn't get it right.
Charity Shops Making Donations Uncomfortable
What fashion items remind you of your parents?

