Mine is people who separate words when they write. I’m Norwegian, and we can string together words indefinetly to make a new word. The never ending word may not make any sense, but it is gramatically correct

Still, people write words the wrong way by separating them.

Examples:

  • “Ananas ringer” means “the pineapple is calling” when written the wrong way. The correct way is “ananasringer” and it means “pineapple rings” (from a tin).

  • “Prinsesse pult i vinkel” means “a princess fucked at an angle”. The correct way to write it is “prinsessepult i vinkel”, and it means “an angeled princess desk” (a desk for children, obviously)

  • “Koke bøker” means “to cook books”. The correct way is “kokebøker” and means “cookbooks”

I see these kinds of mistakes everywhere!

  • @Susaga
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    38 months ago

    Good point, my mistake on hitchhiker. My brain just merged it in with my hatred of threshold.

    It doesn’t matter how old threshold is. They merged the h of hold with the h in the sh sound of thresh. There is an H missing from how it should be spelt.

    • @Hobart_the_GoKart@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Linguists aren’t sure the second part is “hold”.

      Liberman (Oxford University Press blog, Feb. 11, 2015) revives an old theory that the second element is the Proto-Germanic instrumental suffix -thlo and the original sense of threshold was a threshing area adjacent to the living area of a house.

      Ancient words are weird; meanings/ spellings change and are lost to time. It’s what makes it all so interesting. You’re not wrong, but this might be a bad example.

      • @Susaga
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        28 months ago

        I’d accept this as a bad example if it wasn’t pronounced “hold”. Like, you say “thresh hold” and not “thresh old”, and that’s why I get ticked off at it only having one H. Even if there’s an explanation, it’s irritating.