First, it's not a grammar error, it's a spelling error.
I do dislike that error. I'll agree with you there. Though I don't let it bother me. My choice; I don't let it affect my mood.
KuRowbot wrote:
If you said, 'your the greatest man alive,' then I will ponder for a second what my 'the greatest man alive' is. (Not really, but maybe you can see my point.)
Yeah, I know you meant 'you're' as an abbreviation for 'you are,' but that's not even pronounced the same as 'your.'
'Your' should be pronounced 'yor' as in 'for.'
'You're' should be pronounced 'yooer' as in 'viewer.'
Second, for some of us, they ARE pronounce the same. We can't say "your the greatest man alive". We can write it, but we can't say it. Because "your" sounds just like "you're".
Check out the Wiktionary entry for "your":
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/your Note: That it gives 6 different U.S. pronunciations. One of those matches the pronunciation it gives for "you're".
For me, your and you're sound alike and sound like (beyond the first syllable) either "for" or "fur", depending on stress ("fur" would be an unstressed pronunciation).
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not aspie, not NT, somewhere in between
Aspie Quiz: 110 Aspie, 103 Neurotypical.
Used to be more autistic than I am now.