bobg
Über Member
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- Crosby Merseyside
Has anybody noticed this strange shift in the language lately. No more I love it, I hate it etc. I wonder ... or should I say I'm wondering why??

Arch said:I noticed a while back the same sort of thing in people describing something that happened, like a car crash (esp in programmes like Traffic Cops). Instead of "he came round the bend and lost control and rolled over", it's "He's come round the bend etc... I wondered if it was a sort of trend among policemen, in the same way that they render any statement in that special court speak (I heard a statment I'd made read back by a coroner, and cringed at the stiltedness of it). But you hear non-police witnessess using it too.
Someone more knowledgeable about grammer might be able to tell us the difference between 'he came' and 'he's come' in that respect. It's a sort of presentising the past, if I may use such a dreadful made up word.
bobg said:Has anybody noticed this strange shift in the language lately. No more I love it, I hate it etc. I wonder ... or should I say I'm wondering why??![]()
bicyclebelle said:I hate 'Can I get?' as in 'Can I get a cup of coffee?'. What happened to 'Can I have?' ???
It's those bloomin Australian soaps and don't get me started on rising intonation in statements - teenagers these days appear to asking a never ending stream of questions of each other![]()
Perfect Virgo said:Yes I believe the Aussie soaps started it. However it now seems entrenched in Canada too (and I thought I might have escaped it). It's not just the kids either, I hear many adults here asking questions when they are really making statements. Sounds like they have no confidence in what they say and are seeking reassurance.
Arch said:Instead of "he came round the bend and lost control and rolled over", it's "He's come round the bend etc... I wondered if it was a sort of trend among policemen, in the same way that they render any statement in that special court speak (I heard a statment I'd made read back by a coroner, and cringed at the stiltedness of it). But you hear non-police witnessess using it too.
Someone more knowledgeable about grammer might be able to tell us the difference between 'he came' and 'he's come' in that respect. It's a sort of presentising the past, if I may use such a dreadful made up word.
I use both of those but, I hope, not to seek reassurance!Arch said:I think many of us do similar things in posts - using IMO for example or tailing off with ...
Douglas Adams discredited that, on the basis that it isn't.Fnaar said:Technically speaking, people who do this are using the Present Perfect tense...
Uncle Mort said:But surely he is come round the bend is just a welcome return to the traditional form (verbs of motion use to be to form the past perfect) - the king is come etc.![]()