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Pedants' corner

"tex"

24 replies

DeadPoncy · 27/10/2010 00:30

This is driving me mad. That is: "She tex me saying blah blah blah".

THERE ARE THREE WHOLE LETTERS AND A WHOLE TENSE MISSING!

"It's texTED!"

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BunnyLeBOOwski · 27/10/2010 00:34

I've never seen this before and it's seriously making my teeth itch .

A customer from my pub tonight posted on fb that he 'couldn't be harrsed any more'.

I commented that his xmas pressie was going to be a dictionary and begged him to use it and then got a snotty pm saying he

'didn't relize 'letters' could make people fall out'

MardyBra · 27/10/2010 00:37

I've seen "text" used a lot instead of "texted"

IMoveTheStars · 27/10/2010 00:37

THANK YOU!! I hate 'I text you the details', 'Tex' is so much worse.

Bunny - I think I love you Grin (and I need instructions on that IV)

DeadPoncy · 27/10/2010 00:38

Thanks for the quick reply! It's comforting to know I can get a pedant out at short notice, for an emergency! Grin

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IMoveTheStars · 27/10/2010 00:44

It's TEXTED.

It's 'I texted you about the blah' or 'I sent you a text about the blah'. Saying 'I 'text' you about blah' implies that you are perhaps intending to text, but in a very unsure robotic manner.

DeadPoncy · 27/10/2010 00:47

Oops, I missed your other replies. Such a surfeit of support!

I feel very warm and happy and ready for bed, now, having been told this nice bedtime story with the happy ending: "-ted"!

P.S. I do like the Merlot IV. Are there any saltier and sweeter wines which might approximate blood a bit better? Perhaps a port in beef stock gravy?

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DeadPoncy · 27/10/2010 00:49

Good night for now. Thank you, all!

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prism · 27/10/2010 12:14

At the risk of being thrown out of Pedants' Corner I shall stick my neck on the table and say I quite like this "tex".

But my reasons for doing so are entirely pedantic. The fact is, "text" isn't a verb either; it has become one because we need a word for something we do all the time but which wasn't dreamed of before 1997, and here we are agonising over vocabulary that is completely new, as if it had always been there.

How many of us, in an almost bygone age, said "I'll send you a copy of it using the facsimile machine"? I didn't, and I bet none of us did, however pedantic.

So I welcome the new verb "tex", so we can leave "text" as a noun, as God intended.

DeadPoncy · 27/10/2010 12:17

Ah, but what about "telephone"? Even I don't say "telephone to"!

Anyway, please don't hide. It's good to have a debate somewhere outside AIBU!

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pickledbabe · 27/10/2010 12:18

I can send you text, or send information with a text, but I can't text you. text is a noun.

and "tex" is even worse - they don't write tex, though, do they? last I saw it was still "txt" for text.
they say "tex" because the T is a glottal stop, and next to an X that's how it comes out.

DeadPoncy · 27/10/2010 12:23

English "allows" nouns to be used as verbs (PM, SMS, anyone?), and both "telephone" and "call" have lost prepositions ("to" and "on", respectively).

I guess I'm not a very strict pedant....

However, this was a complaint about the glo'al stop (very good point, pickledbabe) and aout not putting the thing in the proper tense (as texTED).

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prism · 27/10/2010 12:29

Tee hee, DeadPoncy. I work with someone who always says "telephone" for some reason. I kind of admire the punctilious approach to speaking that this requires, but it rather irritates me. I suppose telephone didn't start out as a verb either but people got sick of saying "Make a telephone call to..." or whatever the correct form initially was.

I think we should ask the Welsh, actually. They're very good at devising new words properly rather than letting them develop through people's laziness or inability to spell (how would you know anyway?). I'm sure they have a word for "text" (vi) that has a splendid etymology and that pedants everywhere can be proud of.

DeadPoncy · 27/10/2010 17:24

Oooh, do let us know what it is when you find out!

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MardyBra · 27/10/2010 18:34

I would argue that "text" is a verb in current usage.

Language does evolve, and we don't want to be stuck in some 1950s time warp.

"I text him" as a past tense will probably become standard usage one day if it becomes common enough (although I sincerely hope it's not in my time!). But in the meantime, I would argue that it is incorrect.

moros · 27/10/2010 18:37

I dislike "texted". It sounds very clumsy to me. I'm not sure what's wrong with "I sent her a text" that makes it so rarely used.

VictorianIce · 29/10/2010 07:58

Is this nominalisation? We do it all the time with new technology, eg 'scroll'. But people manage to add the 'ed' suffix to that.

Saying 'tex' and 'texing' is just plain lazy. (Harrumph). I've heard 'text' used as the past tense, which I suppose is an attempt at a dental suffix...

whomovedmychocolate · 29/10/2010 08:01

I am very disappointed. I came on here to berate you for describing the 'Tex' in 'Tex-Mex' in lower case and since it refers to Texas it should of course be capitalised. Grin

I tend to disown anyone who uses text messages on a point of principle though. Wink

Ilythia · 29/10/2010 08:14

I think welsh for text is 'neges' or 'neges destun' but don't hold me to that....

badgermonkey · 29/10/2010 08:55

Well, in French, to text is texter - or at least that's what it says in the Year 9 revision booklets at school! I think l'Academie Francaise might have an opinion on that, though.

LadyShapes · 08/11/2010 15:19

Why can't this new verb "to text" evolve as an irregular verb?

arise arose arisen
read read read
write wrote written
text text text
etc

LindyHemming · 08/11/2010 16:34

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

prism · 08/11/2010 16:45

Now come on Euphemia, you know as well as I do that "hoi" is the definite article in Greek, so no true pedant would say "the hoi polloi" Wink

LindyHemming · 08/11/2010 16:49

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

prism · 08/11/2010 17:11

It amazes me that Latin ever caught on, having as it does no word for "yes", "no", "the" or "a". Maybe that's why the Roman empire came to and end...

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