Kobe Steel shares sink as it admits data falsification
I wonder what other water fixtures they share?

Also the author of the book is apparently wanted in Singapore for dodging national service (which is ironic when you consider that this is the kind of thing the super rich would do, and the book was based off of his own experiences growing up...)
I don't get it.Salmoneus wrote:And it's been on the BBC for a while and it keeps catching me: Top tips for making your family swim awesome.
Maybe it's just a British thing. Here, one of the great shibboleths of class in language is traditionally distinguishing adverbs from adjectives: using adjectives adverbially something we're taught from a young age to avoid. So my instinctive reaction is "ugh, even the BBC don't speak good now!"... until I realise that no, that's not 'bad grammar', that's just totally different parsing.
What I interpret as the most likely parsing of the sentence still sounds completely wrong to me, and I am not even British. Awesome is not an adverb!Salmoneus wrote: ↑Tue Aug 28, 2018 3:57 pmMaybe it's just a British thing. Here, one of the great shibboleths of class in language is traditionally distinguishing adverbs from adjectives: using adjectives adverbially something we're taught from a young age to avoid. So my instinctive reaction is "ugh, even the BBC don't speak good now!"... until I realise that no, that's not 'bad grammar', that's just totally different parsing.
Exactly.Travis B. wrote: ↑Wed Aug 29, 2018 11:22 amWhat I interpret as the most likely parsing of the sentence still sounds completely wrong to me, and I am not even British. Awesome is not an adverb!Salmoneus wrote: ↑Tue Aug 28, 2018 3:57 pmMaybe it's just a British thing. Here, one of the great shibboleths of class in language is traditionally distinguishing adverbs from adjectives: using adjectives adverbially something we're taught from a young age to avoid. So my instinctive reaction is "ugh, even the BBC don't speak good now!"... until I realise that no, that's not 'bad grammar', that's just totally different parsing.
Edit: Okay, now I parsed what was meant; I didn't see that "family swim" was intended to be a compound noun.