X at OLS
Posted Jul 23, 2004 20:42 UTC (Fri) by
socket (guest, #43)
In reply to:
X at OLS by ncm
Parent article:
X at OLS
I can't resist this. From the Oxford English Dictionary online:
more, a. (n.) and adv. [...] 4. [...] The phrase any more (freq. written as anymore) (see B. 4a), in which more is the absolute adj., is used advb. in the same sense, and has superseded the simple adv. except in rhetorical or poetic use; also dial. (chiefly U.S.) used in affirmative as well as negative contexts in the sense now, now-a-days, at the present time; from now on. See also NO MORE adv.
I use this sense of "anymore" a lot - both positive and negative. It may be regional, but that region is apparently large enough that the OED considers the U.S. to be that region.
And speaking as a linguist, I find it annoying when people say things like "Correctly used," because the "correct" forms more often match up with archaic forms, and very often with a couple-centuries-old idea that English would be better off if it were more like Latin, leading to rules about how "This is a sentence construction up with which we should not put," which nobody, 200 years ago or now, really thinks is a reasonable way to express oneself as a native English speaker.
So nyeh.
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