Topic: Poor Spelling
Cheer_up's photo
Sat 04/28/12 08:25 PM
Edited by Cheer_up on Sat 04/28/12 08:28 PM



I just wanted to find out everyones' opinion when viewing someone's profile and there are multiple misspelled words, especially when their profession says something like "civil engineer" or "government" etc. You would think they should of a higher education caliber.
Well honestly spelling has nothing to do with smarts my friend people can have Dyslexic or dyslexia lolllll .......Einstein
had an IQ of around 160, and he couldn't spell very well at all. there could be reasons too i would not dwell on others spelling lolllllllllA just a small list of famous people who are Dyslexic or had Dyslexia:there thousands more too :)........... Agatha Christie - (15 September 1890 - 12 January 1976) Agatha Christie was the world's best selling book writer of all times only truly surpassed by the Bible and equaled by Shakespear, her books sold approximately 4 billion copies worldwide. Agatha suffered from dyslexia but in no way did it stop her from being creative and learning how to write, her mystery novels have always been some of the most captivating of all times. Her bestselling book was without a doubt "And then there was none" which was a source of inspiration for novelists and movie makers even many years after.

Albert Einstein - (March 14, 1879 - April 18, 1955) Being one of the most important great minds of his century Albert Einstein was then known to suffer from dyslexia mainly because of his bad memory and his constant failure to memorize the simplest of things. He would not remember the months in the year yet he would succeed in solving some of the most complicated mathematical formulas of the time without any trouble. He may have never learned how to properly tie his shoelaces but his scientific contributions and theories still have a major effect on all of todays current knowledge of science.

Alexander Graham Bell - (3 March 1847 - 2 August 1922) Well known as the inventor of the telephone Alexander was actually attempting to find a way that could make deaf people hear. His mother was slowly becoming deaf when Alexander was only 12 years old making him extremely sensitive to disabilities. Once older he was constantly seeking a way to cure them through technology. He himself had dyslexia which would cause him problems at school, but he always kept his interest for science, especially biology. He would show a great indifference for everything else and would have poor grades. Today Alexander Graham Bell is also well know as one of the founders of the National Geographic society.

Cher - (Born May 20, 1946) Cher was a fatherless child and was most of the time very poor. Her mother tried to make money by singing and acting which ultimately brought Cher to follow into her footsteps. Due to dyslexia cher decided she would quit school and try to take some acting lessons in Los Angeles to finally do what she loved. One day while at the renowned Aldo's Coffee Shop her life changed upon meeting Sonny Bono, which was at the time successful in show business. They eventually made songs together and through fantastic duos with Sonny. The beginning of Cher's lifetime career was at birth.

Dale S. Brown - Dale Brown is a strategic leadership consultant at Washington D.C and an author. Her most recent book is called "Steps to Independance for people with Learning Disabilities" which was published by Learning Disabilities Association of America in 2005. Dale suffers herself from dyslexia and wants to tell the world that learning disabilities does not have to stop you from being who you want to be. It does not have to stop you from striving or harm your capabilities to integrate to everyday life.

Danny Glover - (Born July 22, 1947) A great actor in both Lethal Weapon with Mel Gibson and Predator 2. Danny Glover suffered dyslexia at school when he was younger and the school staff would label him retarded. This definitely was not very encouraging for him but he ended up finding ways to feel better about himself. He says that dyslexia had given him the feeling that he was not worthy to learn and that the people around him would not care of what would happen to his education. With time he eventually regained his self esteem and became a great actor.

George Burns - (January 20, 1896-March 9, 1996) An Academy-Award winning Jewish-American actor and comedian George Burns was a man filled with joy. He and his wife Gracie Allen would frequently team up on radio and television which made them both well known. George was an entertainer until a few years before his 100th birthday. Dyslexia never kept him from being who he was, a legend who had one of the longest American careers in show business history.

Hans Christian Andersen - (April 2 1805 - August 4 1875) Being an author of children's fantasy stories, he was a victim of dyslexia and showed the world that when you want something, nothing can stop you from obtaining it. The books that he wrote have been translated into hundreds of different languages and continue to be distributed even today in millions of copies. Hans wrote books such as "The Emperor's New Clothes", "The Princess and the Pea" "Thumbelina", "The Snow Queen", "The Ugly Duckling" and "The Little Mermaid".

Henry Winkler - Henry Franklin Winkler (born October 30, 1945) is a Golden Globe Award-winning American actor, director, producer and author. He is perhaps most famous for his role as Arthur "Fonzie" Fonzarelli on the popular sitcom Happy Days (1974-1984). Winkler attended the McBurney School and received his bachelor's degree from Emerson College in 1967 and his MFA from the Yale School of Drama in 1970. In 1978, Emerson gave Winkler an honorary doctorate of humane letters. Winkler has also received a Doctor of Humane Letters from Austin College. Having struggled throughout his school years with unidentified dyslexia Winkler, at age 31, finally understood what he'd been grappling with all his life, when making a documentary about dyslexia, Winkler himself found that he was dyslexic.

Jackie Stewart - Sir John Young Stewart, OBE (born 11 June 1939 in Milton, West Dunbartonshire), better known as Jackie, and nicknamed The Flying Scot, is a Scottish former racing driver. He competed in Formula One between 1965 and 1973, winning three World Drivers' Championships. Former F1 champion Sir Jackie Stewart, said he thought he was "thick" at school before discovering he was dyslexic. Sir Jackie said "word blindness" meant he had to race to keep up with other pupils. In those days dyslexia wasn't something that got identified in many schools.

Leonardo Da Vinci - Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci, (April 15, 1452 - May 2, 1519) was a Tuscan polymath: scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, painter, sculptor, architect, botanist, musician and writer. As an engineer, Leonardo conceived ideas vastly ahead of his own time, conceptualising a helicopter, a tank, concentrated solar power, a calculator, and the double hull, and outlining a rudimentary theory of plate tectonics. He also had the gift of dyslexia. Most of the time, he wrote his notes backwards. Although unusual, this is a trait shared by many left-handed dyslexic people. Most of the time, dyslexic writers are not even consciously aware that they are writing this way.
Thomas Edison - Thomas Alva Edison (February 11, 1847 - October 18, 1931) was an American inventor of Dutch origin and businessman who developed many devices that greatly influenced life around the world, including the phonograph and a long lasting light bulb. In school, the young Edison's mind often wandered. He was noted to be terrible at mathematics, unable to focus, and had difficulty with words and speech. This ended Edison's three months of official schooling. The cause of Edison's deafness has been attributed to a bout of scarlet fever during childhood and recurring untreated middle ear infections. Thomas Edison was dyslexic, a problem child, and a mischief-maker. He talked when he was supposed to be listening and did not listen when the teacher talked. He had no patience. He was not well-coordinated and did poorly in sports. He applied himself with a passion to whatever caught his attention, but his attention was easily diverted.

Tom Cruise - Thomas Cruise Mapother IV (born July 3, 1962), more commonly known as Tom Cruise, is an American actor and film producer. Cruise has said that he suffered from abuse as a child. This was partially due to him suffering from dyslexia. He stated that when something went wrong, his father came down hard on him. Having gone through fifteen schools in twelve years, Cruise, who dropped his father's name at age twelve, was also a victim of bullying at school.

Walt Disney - Walter Elias Disney (December 5, 1901 - December 15, 1966) was an American film producer, director, screenwriter, voice actor, animator, entrepreneur, and philanthropist. Disney is notable as one of the most influential and innovative figures in the field of entertainment during the twentieth century. Walt Disney had dyslexia, which is a learning disorder characterized by reading difficulties. While Walt Disney was attending high school he also went to the Academy of Fine Arts. This caused him to have double the school work than an average student on top of the fact that he also dealt with being dyslexic.

Whoopi Goldberg - Whoopi Goldberg (born November 13, 1955) is an American actress, comedian, radio host, TV personality, game show host, and author. Whoopi Goldberg was born Caryn Elaine Johnson in New York City. Whoopi had a lot of difficulty in school, but it was not until she was an adult did she learn that she had dyslexia. Despite her dyslexia, Whoopi Goldberg has gone on to have a highly successful film and television career.



Winston Churchill - Churchill described himself as having a "speech impediment", which he consistently worked to overcome. After many years, he finally stated, "My impediment is no hindrance." Although the Stuttering Foundation of America has claimed that Churchill stammered, the Churchill Centre has concluded that he lisped. Churchill's impediment may also have been cluttering, which would fit more with his lack of attention to unimportant details and his very secure ego. According to several sources Winston Churchill was not dyslexic and had no learning disability whatsoever. In his autobiography he played up his low grades at Harrow, undoubtedly to convince readers, and possibly himself, how much he had overcome; but in this he exaggerated. He was actually quite good at subjects he enjoyed and in fact won several school prizes.


Woodrow Wilson - Former president of the United States. Thomas Woodrow Wilson (December 28, 1856-February 3, 1924), was the twenty-eighth President of the United States. Wilson did not learn to read until he was about 12 years old. His difficulty reading may have indicated dyslexia or A.D.D., but as a teenager he taught himself shorthand to compensate and was able to achieve academically through determination and self-discipline. He studied at home under his father's guidance and took classes in a small school in Augusta.


Fanny Flagg - (born September 21, 1944) is an American author and actress. Flagg has spoken publicly about being dyslexic. Flagg has said she was enormously challenged as a writer because she was "severely dyslexic and couldn't spell. So I was discouraged from writing and embarrassed". Her burgeoning writing career was put on hold for much of the 1970s, but Flagg overcame her fear and completed several novels and screenplays.


George Patton - George Smith Patton GCB, KBE (November 11, 1885 - December 21, 1945) was a leading U.S. Army general in World War II in campaigns in North Africa, Sicily, France, and Germany, 1943-1945. Patton not begin his formal education until age 11, most likely due to dyslexia. Patton attended high school in Pasedena. Upon graduation, Patton was accepted at the Virginia Military Institute. He spent a year at VMI before being accepted to West Point.


Harry Belafonte - Harold George Belafonte, Jr. (born March 1, 1927) is an American musician, actor and social activist. One of the most successful Jamaican musicians in history, he was dubbed the "King of Calypso" for popularizing the Caribbean musical style in the 1950s. Due to problems with dyslexia, Belafonte dropped out of high school and at the age of 17, he joined the US Navy for a couple of years. After that, he returned to New York and settled there. Belafonte became involved with the American Negro Theatre and soon began singing in clubs around the city.


Richard Branson - Sir Richard Charles Nicholas Branson (born 18 July 1950) is an English entrepreneur, best known for his Virgin brand of over 360 companies. Richard Branson has been involved in a number of world record-breaking attempts since 1985, when in the spirit of the Blue Riband he attempted to cross the Atlantic Ocean in the fastest recorded time. Branson has dyslexia, resulting in poor academic performance as a student. School was something of a nightmare for him. He was the captain of football, rugby union and cricket teams, and by the age of fifteen he had started two ventures that eventually failed, one growing Christmas trees and another raising budgerigars.....................So i think the day people stop harassing or criticizing others about spelling or judge others before they know why they write the way they do this world would be a better place to many judge others its just to sad what a cold world have a great night cheers think :banana: waving biggrin :thumbsup: oh and theres tons who are "civil engineer" or "government" people who have the same problems that can't spell good too :)have a look on the net :) maybe this may let people think more have a great night :)

Well, your point is well taken. And I wasn't trying to offend anyone. The type of misspellings I was referring to is, for instance, a guy's profession is listed as "frycleaning". He sent me an email and I went to look at his profile and noticed this. I asked him just what "frycleaning" was. He responded saying he was in the drycleaning business. I explained that on his profile it says "frycleaning". He wasn't aware of that and said he should have checked his spelling better. That was over a month ago and he still hasn't corrected it.

But.....I should have recalled one of my favorite quotes, "don't sweat the small stuff".

thats so true i like that saying don't sweat on the small stuff :) and that person who wrote frycleaning in stead of dry cleaning is really small stuff:) lollllllllll rofl flowerforyou :thumbsup: :) i just saying to many dwell on others mistakes instead of the positives of the person:)and i know your not trying to offend no 1 my friend, but theres better things to do then worry about a negative about someone else's profile lollllllllll i think you should agree on that :) but was nice you let him know cause of a mistake he made but no ones perfect lolll and some just don't get a crap how they write cause its up to them:)have a great night:)cheers

no photo
Sat 04/28/12 08:42 PM

[So i think the day people stop harassing or criticizing others about spelling or judge others before they know why they write the way they do this world would be a better place to many judge others its just to sad what a cold world have a great night cheers think :banana: waving biggrin :thumbsup: oh and theres tons who are "civil engineer" or "government" people who have the same problems that can't spell good too :)have a look on the net :) maybe this may let people think more have a great night :)


If someone knows they have dyslexia, I would think they'd want to utilize tools such as spell check to catch many of the mistakes for them. Especially when writing is the main way of communicating with others.

PacificStar48's photo
Sat 04/28/12 09:27 PM
While I can when required make the effort to spell essential communication correctly I do not see that a profile or casual communication in forums or chat rises to that level.

In life there are many reasons that a person communicates on a less than formally correct basis which have no correllation to inteligence, education, ability provide,disabilty, or an attitude.

While I can not speak for any other person with a disability that might be reflected in less than perfect spelling or writing skills I do know the popular view is there are much more critical matters to be concerned with then constantly trying to compensate to fit a "norm" they might see as artificially exceptional as their way of communicateing seems to a few who are hyper-critical enough to assign social human value on such a minor factor.

If my poor spelling is going to devalue me or drive someone batty then by all means spare me interacttion with that person and I will pray for them to be repaired of their extreamly rigid parameters in a world that is least likely to afford them much comfort.




GravelRidgeBoy's photo
Sun 04/29/12 12:18 AM
I try to spell correctly and use decent grammar, it is not to show that I am educated or anything more than I want to get my point across to who ever reads what I am writing. There are plenty of profiles and posts that I just skip over because of how it is written. To me text writing is the death of writing, I even have text blocked on my phone. The only thing is sometimes when I write (like right now) it is late at night so tomorrow this might not make as much sense to me as it does right now...lol.

TammyA's photo
Sun 04/29/12 07:08 AM
While texting, emailing or chatting, if someone misspells a word, I don't bring it to their attention unless it doesn't make sense to me. When communicating in that manner, you try to respond quickly, and we all make typing mistakes. But on your profile, when you have all the time in the world to make it right, I think you should. By the way, an occasional misspelled word on a profile is NOT a deal breaker for me.

metalwing's photo
Sun 04/29/12 07:21 AM
I am a terrible speller, always have been. Sometimes it is with the same words over and over and some very simple words. I spell check.

I have a lot of education and have written thousands of complex documents. Spelling is not a good judge of education or intelligence. Bad spelling is a sign of someone who does not spell check.

soufiehere's photo
Sun 04/29/12 07:43 AM
I would pit my spelling skills against ANYone's.
But I still like you all :-)

TammyA's photo
Sun 04/29/12 07:46 AM

I am a terrible speller, always have been. Sometimes it is with the same words over and over and some very simple words. I spell check.

I have a lot of education and have written thousands of complex documents. Spelling is not a good judge of education or intelligence. Bad spelling is a sign of someone who does not spell check.



I guess what I'm trying to say is, your profile is your first impression to others. Whether or not you are a good speller, you should spell check.

no photo
Sun 04/29/12 08:16 AM

I am a terrible speller, always have been. Sometimes it is with the same words over and over and some very simple words. I spell check.

I have a lot of education and have written thousands of complex documents. Spelling is not a good judge of education or intelligence. Bad spelling is a sign of someone who does not spell check.


And that's exactly what it's there for! I always use spell check. I want to make sure I catch any mistakes possible to catch. I also try to make sure I use correct punctuation. Why? Because I want what I write to be easy for others to read and make sense. I don't understand why others don't do the same.

I asked someone once (not someone in the forums) why they didn't use spell check or use punctuation. They said in this setting, they didn't feel they needed to. However, because of no punctuation, it was very hard to follow what he wrote, as every sentence ran together. It was hard to see where one thought stopped and another one started. He just didn't get it. I tend to skip over posts like that in the forums, because they're just tough to read.

TammyA's photo
Sun 04/29/12 08:24 AM


I am a terrible speller, always have been. Sometimes it is with the same words over and over and some very simple words. I spell check.

I have a lot of education and have written thousands of complex documents. Spelling is not a good judge of education or intelligence. Bad spelling is a sign of someone who does not spell check.


And that's exactly what it's there for! I always use spell check. I want to make sure I catch any mistakes possible to catch. I also try to make sure I use correct punctuation. Why? Because I want what I write to be easy for others to read and make sense. I don't understand why others don't do the same.

I asked someone once (not someone in the forums) why they didn't use spell check or use punctuation. They said in this setting, they didn't feel they needed to. However, because of no punctuation, it was very hard to follow what he wrote, as every sentence ran together. It was hard to see where one thought stopped and another one started. He just didn't get it. I tend to skip over posts like that in the forums, because they're just tough to read.

Yea, poor punctuation makes it very difficult to understand. If you can't read something with ease, PASS!!!

no photo
Sun 04/29/12 09:13 AM
As long as I get a gist of what’s being said, it doesn’t really bother me. I find text speak much more irritating.

teadipper's photo
Sun 04/29/12 09:23 AM
I speak to people all over the world. They put in the effort to spell things correctly and form sentences that make sense. To me, someone who does not at least try, is lazy and probably not going to be able to live in my world.

Oh I said something was "my favorite in the universe" to one of my Mensa friends. He thought he was clever and would stump me and said, "Which universe?" I got him though, I said, "the one which revolves around ME, of course"!!

MissB4ya's photo
Sun 04/29/12 09:49 AM

I just wanted to find out everyones' opinion when viewing someone's profile and there are multiple misspelled words, especially when their profession says something like "civil engineer" or "government" etc. You would think they should of a higher education caliber.


laugh

They could be a janitor at a highly classified government building....ooooor perhaps the paper shredder at a very prominent engineers office.

TxsGal3333's photo
Sun 04/29/12 09:50 AM



Absolutely not. Why not use it?

of course, you're right: i just didn't notice until now that this service is included in Mingle2



Actually that is not a service that Mingle2 offers that comes with the browser service that you use... Mingle2 does not have anything to do with the spell check service...

I have Firefox at home it comes with that browser I have Internet Explorer at work and it does not do the spell check either that or I don't have it checked in order to do so..

But it is something I do use a lot.

MissB4ya's photo
Sun 04/29/12 09:50 AM
P.S.

I was just telling someone that we need to protest auto-correct. Do you know how many epic fails i have encountered since that crap started? ...........tons

TammyA's photo
Sun 04/29/12 09:56 AM


I just wanted to find out everyones' opinion when viewing someone's profile and there are multiple misspelled words, especially when their profession says something like "civil engineer" or "government" etc. You would think they should of a higher education caliber.


laugh

They could be a janitor at a highly classified government building....ooooor perhaps the paper shredder at a very prominent engineers office.


Janitors are usually contracted from an outside company so just because someone cleans a government building does not justify them putting government as their profession. And being a paper shredder in an engineers office does not make you a civil engineer. Thus, bringing up another topic, "misrepresentation".

TxsGal3333's photo
Sun 04/29/12 09:56 AM
As far as spelling goes as long as I can decipher what they are saying then what is the big issue about..To me if ones judge others totally on how they spell they will miss out on who that person really is.

I have known those with a much higher education then me that spelling is not their best asset so what they can't spell good... It does not make them any less of a person..

And sure the heck does not mean that those that spell better is better then they are... whoa

TammyA's photo
Sun 04/29/12 09:59 AM

P.S.

I was just telling someone that we need to protest auto-correct. Do you know how many epic fails i have encountered since that crap started? ...........tons


I HATE auto-correct. It takes more time to fix what auto-correct is trying to enter than to just enter the words myself.

MissB4ya's photo
Sun 04/29/12 10:02 AM



I just wanted to find out everyones' opinion when viewing someone's profile and there are multiple misspelled words, especially when their profession says something like "civil engineer" or "government" etc. You would think they should of a higher education caliber.


laugh

They could be a janitor at a highly classified government building....ooooor perhaps the paper shredder at a very prominent engineers office.


Janitors are usually contracted from an outside company so just because someone cleans a government building does not justify them putting government as their profession. And being a paper shredder in an engineers office does not make you a civil engineer. Thus, bringing up another topic, "misrepresentation".


LoL I know...I was joking. And auto correct is the devil...i hate that ish!

no photo
Sun 04/29/12 10:04 AM

As far as spelling goes as long as I can decipher what they are saying then what is the big issue about..To me if ones judge others totally on how they spell they will miss out on who that person really is.

I have known those with a much higher education then me that spelling is not their best asset so what they can't spell good... It does not make them any less of a person..

And sure the heck does not mean that those that spell better is better them they are... whoa


I'm pretty sure there's an extension you can add to IE for spell check. Just google for it.