Particularly in these instances:
1. they're, there, their -- They're putting their books right there.
2. your, you're -- You're going to regret not bringing your umbrella.
3. lose, loose -- You lose games. Your clothing is loose.
4. quite, quiet -- The evening was quite quiet.
5. to, too -- You're too nice to her.
6. Incorrect use of plural and possessive forms. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, you are an offender. This drives me totally insane. When you address something to people, it is The Smiths, not The Smith's. Possessive form of a noun indicates that the noun owns something, so if you use that apostrophe, the noun better be in possession of something.
7. Cutesy spellings -- Nite. Lite. No.
8. "The" is a word that has no abbreviation. "Da" is not a form or abbreviation of "the". Don't use it. I'm serious.
9. If you can type out gr8t, you can surely type out great. The same goes for 2 - it's just one keystroke less than to. R instead of are saves you 1.5 seconds. It also makes you look stupid.
Take your time. Think about what you're saying. Express yourself intelligently. Make your kids do the same. When you're not sure how to write or spell something, look it up in a reference guide or on the world wide web.
You may now return to COVID-19 coverage and the corresponding Facebook status updates.
Grammatically yours,
Erin
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