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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: zonkie who wrote (134586)4/2/2001 8:47:10 AM
From: gao seng  Respond to of 769667
 
I was not jumping on you or defending anyone. While I normally think complaining about spelling and grammar is lame, I myself have a pet peeve and do not like to see people use the word don't so yes, I guess I am guilty of double standard.

Main Entry: 1don't
Pronunciation: 'dOnt
Date: 1639
1 : do not
2 : does not
usage Don't is the earliest attested contraction of does not and until about 1900 was the standard spoken form in the U.S. (it survived as spoken standard longer in British English). Dialect surveys find it more common in the speech of the less educated than in that of the educated; in those places (as the Midland and southern Atlantic seaboard regions) where it has lasted in educated speech, it is most common with older informants. Surveys of attitudes toward usage show it more widely disapproved in 1971 than it had been 40 years earlier. Its chief use in edited prose is in fiction for purposes of characterization. It is sometimes used consciously, like ain't, to gain an informal effect.