That evening, she hosted her nephew, Tom, a successful app developer who spoke in the fragmented, rapid clauses of the digital age. As they sat down to pasta, Tom held up his phone. “So, me and my team…”
“Defective modals!” Tom raised his glass. “The best kind.”
Eleanor laughed. It was a rusty, surprised sound. All evening, they talked about aspect versus tense , the rise of the get -passive (“The window got broken”), and the curious life of the singular they . oxford modern english grammar by bas aarts
Tom nodded, chewing. “Aarts calls it a ‘thematic choice.’ The agent is suppressed because the speaker wants to avoid blame. Not bad grammar—just politics.”
“ My team and I ,” Eleanor corrected, before she could stop herself. The ghost of old habits. That evening, she hosted her nephew, Tom, a
Tom grinned. “See, Aunt Ellie, that’s a ‘prescriptive rule.’ Bas Aarts would say my sentence is fine. ‘Me’ in subject coordination is common in informal English.”
She opened the wine first, then the book. “Descriptive, not prescriptive,” she murmured, reading the preface. “Grammar as it is , not as it should be.” She found this both liberating and deeply unsettling. “The best kind
“Cover to cover. It’s a noun phrase goldmine. Listen.” He pointed his fork. “You know the ‘split infinitive’? The thing you yelled at me for in 2005? Aarts points out that it’s been used by good writers since the 13th century. ‘To boldly go’ isn’t an error—it’s a style choice .”