One more hour of sewing
Dec. 21st, 2004 05:59 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)




In other news, today was my last day of classes for the year. I still have to go in to work tomorrow, but there aren't any classes, just cleaning and an assembly.
<random linguistic musing>
One of the teachers who went on the Australia trip asked me whether "asthma" had "the" in front of it when explaining one's medical condition. I didn't think much of it at the time, but this morning I pondered it further. We have a number of conditions that use "the" in front of them, such as "I have the measles" and "I have the flu," yet we have a number that don't use "the" in front of them, such as "I have chicken pox" and "I have pneumonia." I tried to figure out whether there was any kind of pattern, such as severity of the disease, but nothing came to me. How is a non-native speaker to know whether to use "the" or not?
no subject
Date: 2004-12-21 01:58 pm (UTC)I can't find a pattern either, but I suspect that we'll do best finding a pattern in the ones (far fewer) that DO use "the".
Hmm.
Then there are the ones that are, "I have a heart condition" or "I have a bad back" ...some even use the indefinite article. English is whacked.
no subject
Date: 2004-12-21 03:20 pm (UTC)It seems, though, like they could safely leave "the" off in most cases -- "I have measles/flu" is correct, while "I have the asthma" sounds funny. (The "a" examples all seems to have to do with modifying an ordinary noun, like "condition" or "back".)
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Date: 2004-12-21 03:34 pm (UTC)English is a Frankenstein in every way. It's an unholy mish-mosh of different languages, grammars, tradition, vocabulary, and roots.
I love it, but I'm SO lucky to have had it as my FIRST language!
no subject
Date: 2004-12-21 08:55 pm (UTC)I couldn't agree more. I think that so often. Prepositions are a nightmare, and if that doesn't get you, the spelling will. (I had a student the other day who, when writing about her boyfriend, had typed "I will kiss his rip" before a friend pointed out she needed to use l instead of r.)