We are getting a little hyper sensitive.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/florida-vs-kentucky-gators-fan-140130876.html
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/florida-vs-kentucky-gators-fan-140130876.html
Hopefully he said "WDE" after the diatribe.The funniest part of the sign-maker's FAIL is that, while attempting to make fun of JW's pronunciation, the sign says that strong/scrong is a verb. It reminds me of the time Bobby from Homewood called Finebaum's show to make fun of a girl's country accent. At one point in his diatribe he said, "She can't even speak good grammar, Paul!" :rofl:
Or grammar?Why you make fun of some one for language or any other reason for that matter?
Every one don't have perfect grammar like me do!Or grammar?
I have experienced bias as I have traveled and even from friends I have known all my life when they visit from other parts of the country. I have fun with them over it and even exaggerate my southern dialect at times. My lack of stress and ability to engage in conversations soon win them over. Perhaps if sensitivities were lessened and everyone stopped being so "offended" by so many things, the world would be a better place.Anywhere I go in the U.S., outside the south, someone comments on my accent. In other countries, those who understand English don't "hear" my accent, they just hear English. I find it easier to establish respectful rapport when I don't have to overcome the initial condescension and preconceptions based on my accent. Having fun with the way someone speaks is fine, but it's awfully easy to try to define someone's complete existence by their manner of speech.
Or Mark Ingram for that matter......his was intellgible just stutteringRemember Courtney Upshaw's unintelligible rambling after the MNC game against Texas?
Why you make fun of some one for language or any other reason for that matter?
As long as you agree that you deserve to be publicly ridiculed for all of your shortcomings, I have no objections.At this point, in this country, there is absolutely no excuse for anyone under the age of, say, 75 years old to not use proper English when both speaking and writing. Anyone who fits this criteria - especially college-educated individuals - and is unable to use proper punctuation, use proper sentence structure, and correctly use and pronounce common English words deserves to be publicly ridiculed.
Black people do.In the video game Borderlands 2, there is a preteen white girl )Tiny Tina_ who speaks ghetto slang, and there was an uproar about it, saying it is racist and all that.
My question to those with objections is, "who says this speech pattern is to be associated exclusively with black people?"
In threads on the topic, black people are saying it's funny and to leave it alone.Black people do.