undergroundoli
Well-Known Member
And slightly off topic but if I see another post about my ponio, baby ponio or baby horsey I'll puke all over the keyboard.
I used to HATE it, but I seem to have developed a worrying tollerance.
And slightly off topic but if I see another post about my ponio, baby ponio or baby horsey I'll puke all over the keyboard.
It's a slippery downward slope when the general opinion is that it doesn't matter and is not important.
Most bad spelling is not dyslexia at all, just an excuse.
Inaccurate spelling can and does change the meaning of a word completely, as example in OP. Although I agree the use of spell check sometimes is the problem. My phone often thinks it knows better than me what I'm trying to say.
Worse than that for me though is the use of a completely different word.
For example.
She should OF left it alone.
Instead of
She should HAVE left it alone.
How on earth does someone get to adult or even teens without that being corrected.
When I was at school, my mother would comment that the standard of education was getting poorer. She would not believe the end result of state education today.
I think it's only a regional thing at your vet clinic lol! Spay is not an Americanism. It comes from the Latin word spathe and as long as I've been alive, it's always been spay :smile3: Spey is a river.the vets at work all spell it spey but do admit it may be a regional thing but that it has come over from USA as spay
Seconded! Lol!Another in the spay campI vote you work with vets who cannot spell
![]()
Wingles instead of windgalls makes me giggle a silly amount. And when we went to see an old pony, he was advertised as being "skewballed"... Bit concerned for his health initially![/QUOTE
Was that the skewballed pony that had cushions as well as wingles?
It drives me mad that on a horse forum, people don't either know how to spell the subject specific vocabulary that they use, or can't be bothered to check it. Although I do realise that computer spell-checkers will let through any version of a word, so long as the correct spelling of one version is used, and that often Americanisation is considered correct, over the proper English word.
Laminitis crops up on this forum so often that surely every-one should know it doesn't end in 'us'.
And yes, 'spay' is correct, with the past tense being 'spayed'. Spey is a river is Scotland. It's always best to check your facts before correcting others, I find.
I'm dyslexic and I KNOW I get that word wrong so I asked my computer and it said it was ok. I must have accidentily added it to the dictionary. Glad HHO spotted that as I'm out on my imaginargy horse with my imaginary pack of job hounds sailing over hedges job hunting at the moment.
*throws JA the customary food and beatles off to talk to spell checker*
Where/were/we're
There/Their/They're
Trail/Trial
And slightly off topic but if I see another post about my ponio, baby ponio or baby horsey I'll puke all over the keyboard. I generally stop reading posts as soon as I come across those words!
<runsandhidesfromirateponioowners>
Like welshD I can write/type properly, but I won't panic if I make a typo or whatever on a horse forum. On informal websites like this, I just type how I talk.
I saw an advert the other day for a Welsh "Mounting" pony :-0
This. Spay. Although 'how much is it to have my dog spaded?' is worse. Along with 'I want my dog newted'.
Twiggy2 - I suggest that if you can't compromise you instead grab the academic high ground and refuse to refer to anything except ovariohysterectomy in future - or OHE if you want to shorten it.
Sorry, my pedantic bit is coming out, but that should be 'too' short. But you're right!Now we are writing so many posts on devices with a auto correct, spellings just get altered, punctuation gets missed (see above!) I try to only get irritated by the things that really matter. Life is far to short!