If people must write a letter to the club, why can't they at least get somebody who can spell and is on first name terms with Mr Grammar to give it a once over?
I'm all for good grammar, but don't put the guy down for it. Sometimes the content, the emotion, are more important than those rules and conveying that, in whatever way one can, is the real nub of things.
I bet Faulkner wouldn't chuck a badly spelt letter in the bin if it included a season ticket renewal application.Although I'd like to think he wouldn't be as much of a snob as some people on here
Quote from: James on April 18, 2012, 01:52:12 PMI'm all for good grammar, but don't put the guy down for it. Sometimes the content, the emotion, are more important than those rules and conveying that, in whatever way one can, is the real nub of things.True enough but, like it or not, in a business setting such basic errors in English give the impression that the writer doesn't have a clue and therefore immediately takes away a lot of the impact of the letter.