An article about Midwestern sayings and expressions: [link]
I had no idea "come with" was a Midwestern expression.
Which brings us to "come with," probably the most common example of Midwest speak. "I'm going for coffee. You want to come with?" (Also works for "bring with," "go with" and most verbs indicating movement.)
John Spartz, assistant professor in the department of writing studies at the University of Minnesota Duluth, explored the famous phrase in his PhD dissertation: "Do You Want to Come With?: A Cross-dialectal, Multi-field, Variationist Investigation of With as a Particle Selected By Motion Verbs in The Minnesota Dialect of English."
He says "come with" can be traced to the upper Midwest's heavily German, Norwegian, Swedish and Dutch roots.
"Basically these immigrants landed here, and in learning English took some of the nuances of their languages and mapped them on to English," Spartz says. "There are some super technical linguistic reasons that happened, but essentially the phrase is prevalent in a variety of those languages so it makes sense that it would find its way into English as well."
But is it grammatically correct?
"It's actually completely correct," says Spartz. "Grammar school grammar rules tell you not to end a sentence with a preposition, but it's not a preposition. It's actually a particle as part of a phrasal verb. Just like in 'I kicked over a bucket,' 'kicked' and 'over' are both part of the verb. 'With' is, in fact, part of the verb. The verb moves as a unit."
But it's not an expression I use much....
I say comewith.
Oh, Perkins, that sounds like no fun at all.
Hmm. I say come with too.
Perkins, are you going to tell them why you're switching? Good on you for taking action, suck on them for precipitating it.
BOO on Perkins' day.
In more FuckCancer news. That thing on my mom's face, positive for cancer. She goes to the Dr. 1/3/11 to have more removed. They will not know until then if she will have to see a plastic surgeon also, or if they have any fear that it is elsewhere.
For Hec: There's more than one way to wreck an airship
Well. That looks a little off, doesn't it?
The USS Los Angeles was a Navy airship, built as part of German war reparations from World War I. Early in her career, the Los Angeles was drained of hydrogen and refilled with non-flammable helium. Good idea, that. But it wasn't enough to make her accident-proof. This photo was taken on August 25, 1927, after a sudden change in the wind direction caught the back end of the moored Los Angeles.
Within moments, she was completely vertical.
I am going to do a task. call a potential psychiatrist for myself so I have someone to manage my meds who is local, not in NY.
I already did one yuck chore - deleting more emails from my work computer. I cleared out over 500.
I have been working on that project definition power point deck. Which requires me to read my boss's mind and then have him evaluate my precision. Also, I don't know how to differentiate between purpose and charter and objectives. Not to mention how that overlaps with scope.
Also, my nails suck and my teeth hurt. And I'm still pouty about last night's dream. I had to commit suicide, dammit! And it didn't even end the story.
are you going to tell them why you're switching?
Oh yeah. I also told the Breast Cancer Care coordinator, since she is the one I called to see what the process was.
I finally got a call back, and I don't have to go back, which is good.
I guess my 11:00 task is going to be calling to see if I can make an appointment with the other doctor.
I'm sorry about your mom, msbelle. I hope they can remove it easily and that that will be all they need to do.
I bet that airship picture inspired Miyazaki in Kiki's Delivery Service.
And I'm still pouty about last night's dream.
Oooh, I just remembered my dream. I had to break into this old, abandoned Art Deco hotel. And then discovered that the cafe inside it was still open and serving customers even though the whole thing was a wreck.
I had to commit suicide, dammit!
By what means?