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I had a bad week last week. When that happens, everything goes wrong; it's Murphy's Law. I was posting on realbeer.com, which hardly has the world's greatest grammar mavens, and I made a grammatical error and was caught. I wrote, "Guinness tastes differently in Ireland." I did think about it briefly and thought it should by an adverb because it describes how it tastes. How has always been my operative word for an adverb. However, of course it's the same as "I feel bad" versus "I feel badly." But why exactly? | ||
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...or should it be, "But why exact?" Myth Jellies Cerebroplegia--the cure is within our grasp | |||
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I think the idea is that taste is a "linking verb" like feel or seem or appear, and that "linking verbs" "should be" followed by adjectives. However, as MWDEU says, for every prescriptivist who forbids feel badly, there is a prescriptivist who says feel badly is ok. | |||
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I liked Bob's response on my Blog entry about this. Bob, I hope you don't mind if I quote you here:
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