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Re: Correcting and encouraging non native English speakers

by shadox (Priest)
on Sep 10, 2001 at 21:15 UTC ( [id://111511]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to Correcting and encouraging non native English speakers

I totally agree with stefp, sometimes for non english native speakers it is dificult to ask what they got in mind, and i can bet that some people just don't ask because they don't know a word and don't like the idea of type it wrong. Something like  "<correct my english>" or  "<spell checking>" would be very useful for all of us.
Shadox

Dreams, they just disapear into the shadows, then they become true

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Re: Re: Correcting and encouraging non native English speakers
by Hanamaki (Chaplain) on Sep 10, 2001 at 22:28 UTC
    I am also one of these non-native speakers of English.
    But if I don't know a word, I reach for one of these fine inventions called dictionary. I know I am a really bad speller but I will never ask for spellchecking, because I can do that job with my spell-checker. Therefore, a <spellchecking> button would actually mean Heya! I was too lazzy to do speelchecking, please could you do it for me? No, I do not want to ask for such a feature.

    While spellchecking and looking up words I don't know, can be done easily by myself, I feel quit uneasy when it comes to word usage, grammar, wordorder, etc. pp. . Especially if I was going to write longer prose like a tutorial or book review which also will have a wider audience than this little node, it would be nice if there were some volonteer editors who could check my writings.

    And yes, like many non native speakers of English I feel quit ashamed for my bad English. (Especially if fellow countymen of mine look at me from behind. Definitly a psychological problem for many of us non native speakers.)

    Hanamaki
      like ichimunki and doubtless many others, I'd be more than delighted to give feedback when wanted on prose style and grammar, just in the same way as it's always a pleasure to answer somebody's uncertainty about perl (not that I'm often in a position to do that - I probably am actually more use with English). I'd suggest anyone who would welcome that kind of input put something like "always glad to get feedback on my Egnlish" in the sig.

      {But PLEASE don't feel "ashamed" - (A) if you get your meaning across (as you do) then you have succeeded; and (B) most native English-speakers (at least Brits and Americans) are LOUSY at other languages - because everybody else speaks our language so well, we get to be very lazy.}

      § George Sherston

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