conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2009-02-25 06:35 pm

Today, Ana was playing with a stick when she decided to break it.

And after she broke it she came running up and said "Connie! I broke my stick with using my hand!"

This might be a simple error like people make all the time - starting to say "with my hand" but deciding mid-word to go with "using my hand" instead - except that I feel certain I've heard her use the "with verbing" construction before, if not very recently.

I like it a lot, actually :)
ancarett: Change the World - Jack Layton's Last Letter (Default)

[personal profile] ancarett 2009-02-26 12:23 am (UTC)(link)
Probably she's getting it linked, in her mind, with the "by using" construction. But cool!
ancarett: Change the World - Jack Layton's Last Letter (Default)

[personal profile] ancarett 2009-02-26 03:02 am (UTC)(link)
The "by using" is stilted but if she watches many educational or nature videos, narrators seem to use the most arcane and convoluted sentence structure as they draw the story out, e.g. "the chimpanzee is fending for himself by using a stick to pull ants out of the tree trunk."

"Zipper up?" That's strange. I can't even see "Zippers up!" being used as a command. "Zip up?" Sure.
ancarett: Change the World - Jack Layton's Last Letter (Default)

[personal profile] ancarett 2009-02-26 03:13 am (UTC)(link)
From the sounds of it, they already say interesting things at her school. They might also have some of those really old educational videos along the lines of "Nickel: the Vital Metal!" or "Five Ways for Better Flossing."

[identity profile] sparkofcreation.livejournal.com 2009-02-26 03:53 am (UTC)(link)
I was wondering if it's a back formation from without using my hand.
ancarett: (Historian Prejudiced Austen)

[personal profile] ancarett 2009-02-26 12:23 am (UTC)(link)
Probably she's getting it linked, in her mind, with the "by using" construction. But cool!
ancarett: (HP Silly 50 Things)

[personal profile] ancarett 2009-02-26 03:02 am (UTC)(link)
The "by using" is stilted but if she watches many educational or nature videos, narrators seem to use the most arcane and convoluted sentence structure as they draw the story out, e.g. "the chimpanzee is fending for himself by using a stick to pull ants out of the tree trunk."

"Zipper up?" That's strange. I can't even see "Zippers up!" being used as a command. "Zip up?" Sure.
ancarett: (Genius Edna Mode Incredibles)

[personal profile] ancarett 2009-02-26 03:13 am (UTC)(link)
From the sounds of it, they already say interesting things at her school. They might also have some of those really old educational videos along the lines of "Nickel: the Vital Metal!" or "Five Ways for Better Flossing."

[identity profile] sparkofcreation.livejournal.com 2009-02-26 03:53 am (UTC)(link)
I was wondering if it's a back formation from without using my hand.