How grammatically sound are you?

I found this through Ian W. Considering all the discussions going on in the reputation thread, I thought other people might find this interesting


You are a GRAMMAR GOD!

If your mission in life is not already to preserve the English tongue, it should be.
Congratulations and thank you!

How grammatically sound are you?

I am a Grammar God. I proclaim that #7 is not worthy of this Holy Grammar Test, because it is worded incorrectly.

#7. __________ faced turned a bright shade of red.

No combination of apostrophes or the letter “s” will allow the noun, “Chris”, to take ownership of the verb, “faced”. :smiley: The Holy Testmaker should replace the verb, “faced”, with the noun, “face”.

:eek: The results of my quiz are not appropriate to post on Delphi.

Hmm, the only “clean” part of the grading/response I received was that it stated English was my my third language, and I should go back to school. Well, it’s a little off, and I think an A in college writing makes up for it. :wink:

You are a MASTER of the English language!

While your English is not exactly perfect, you are still more grammatically correct than just about every American. Still, there is always room for improvement…

Not too shabby since english was my worst subject… :slight_smile:


You are a MASTER of the English language!

While your English is not exactly perfect, you are still more grammatically correct than just about every American. Still, there is always room for improvement…

college writing, perhaps?

When I took the quiz I got the same answer, “English was my third language”, response. I guess that means I should stick to building robots and not consider a job teaching English. :rolleyes: I wonder if that will affect learning C programming language. :stuck_out_tongue:

Well, I am a Grammar God too! My English teacher would be proud if she knew how good I could write. (Yes, forgive me. ;))

Although I really must take contention with this quiz. It acts like grammar or language is a static concept, with all players concerned in complete agreement. If I might break again from my aforementioned title, IT AIN’T SO!

It makes one think just what is grammar … is it a set of rules that never changes which we must adhere to arbitrarily, or is it a reflection of common usage – or something in between? I always keep in mind what my former English teacher told me: the moment any great language dies is when the first grammar book is published. Really, a lot of what we are told about “grammar” is arbitrary or just plain wrong …

Specifically, I refer to these questions:

(1) Snuck has been in use since the 19th century, and Merriam-Webster says it has “risen to the status of … equality with sneaked.”
(2) That and which can both be used here, “although some handbooks say otherwise.” (Merriam-Webster)
(10) “It is clear that the rules laid down have never very accurately reflected the actual usage.” (Merriam-Webster)
(11) This seems to quibble about split infinitives. See what Merriam-Webster has to say! “Even though there has never been a rational basis for objecting to the split infinitive, the subject has become a fixture of folk belief about grammar.” It goes on to say that most grammarians, because of such ardent misbelief by many, advise to only use a split infinitive in the case of clarity. This brings up a good point. When you have the choice between “good grammar” and “good sense” always chose the latter. The goal of writing is not to adhere arbitrarily to some set of imaginary principles; rather, it should be clarity, the goal should be to convey some message to the reader – yes, rules are needed for this, but rules for rules’ sake are not (especially when these are only rules depending on who you ask!). [Anyone spot the split infinitive I used?]
(15) The distinction between “less” and “few” is, at best, a traditional that isn’t and never really has been strict. (Merriam-Webster)
(16) It always makes me laugh when teachers are so intent about where a student puts punctuation in reference to quotation marks. In the US the tradition has been to put punctuation inside, while in some other countries it is just the opposite. Why? Some sacred rule or guiding principle that served our forefathers well? Bah! It was to save a few bucks. It had to do with the font type used by most editors and how to save space.
(17) Both “alright” and “all right” are al[l ]right. (Merriam-Webster)

Well, I better get back to some good, solid engineering … where rules and principles are pretty much agreed upon!

You are a GRAMMAR GOD!

If your mission in life is not already to preserve the English tongue, it should be. Congratulations and thank you!

Hm… guess SAT II Writing taught me some stuff :wink:

A Grammar God I am…
I wouldn’t trust the results though, since I don’t know for sure if that sentence is correct or not…should there be a comma after “God”?

Yay! I am a Grammar God! I feel special! I don’t know how that happened though, I do not like English. Oh well…

Suprisingly I’m supposly good at grammar. But not really, I’m awful with the English language.

You are a MASTER of the English language!

While your English is not exactly perfect, you are still more grammatically correct than just about every American. Still, there is always room for improvement…

Yay… Master for me too!!!

What the heck is a “modifier”??

I’m a Grammar God.
good thing, too, seeing as I am Chief Editor for my college literary magazine, and I am incredibly fickle about grammar. It would suck if I didn’t have grasp on it myself!

I’m a Grammar God, cool!
I thought I got all of them wrong. I’m a good guesser.

<img src=“http://images.quizilla.com/B/BaalObsidian/1080162080_cturesgod3.jpg” border=“0” alt=“Grammar God!”><br>You are a <b>GRAMMAR GOD</b>!
<br><br>If your mission in life is not already to<br>preserve the English tongue, it should be.<br>Congratulations and thank you!
<br><br><a href=“http://quizilla.com/users/BaalObsidian/quizzes/How%20grammatically%20sound%20are%20you%3F/”> <font size="-1">How grammatically sound are you?</font></a><BR> <font size="-3">brought to you by <a href=“http://quizilla.com”>Quizilla</a></font>

Edit: Oops, looks like html code is off, anyway, it’s says I’m a God.

Although I can’t say I’ve ever gotten a B on a paper. But I lose points for content, not grammar.