I didn't think anyone apart from the Queen and Princess Anne used "one" these days.
Actually I always think that "one" instead of "you" sounds so pretentious.
What does irritate me (when I am in the mood to be easily irritated) is when people say "you" when it would be much more sensible to say "I".
I am referring to instances where someone is describing their own reaction or feelings and they speak as if it is generally true or as if it applies to you.
Surely an athlete who has just been asked how they feel as they wait for the starter's gun should say something like, "I am so focussed on the race that there is no time for anything else, so I don't get nervous", rather than, "You are so focussed on the race that there is no time for anything else, so you don't get nervous."
Of course that is not always true. In fact in a very large number of cases the word will be found without too much trouble.
It certainly would not be true in the case of the word that cropped up in this thread. Anyone looking for "definately" in the dictionary would have to be blind not to spot "definitely". In my two volume World Book Dictionary, it is only about six entries or 50mm further down the page and a couple of the entries in between are "definite" and "definite article".
I suspect that the comment about needing to be able to spell to use a dictionary is one of those glib throw away lines that sounds good and is heard so often that people have begun to believe it is true.
It just occurred to me that coloured print is often harder to read, especially for people with problems with their eyesight. Sorry Ron, but I thought the color coded replies would make it more obvious what I was responding to.




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