When my friend Jodi first sent me this ad that she found in a budget travel magazine, I was certain that it was a your/you're error.
But now I'm wondering if the editors actually meant "find you are happy." Thoughts?
The Worlds' Worst. Punctuation;
When my friend Jodi first sent me this ad that she found in a budget travel magazine, I was certain that it was a your/you're error.
6 comments:
I actually thought it was supposed be be "Find your 'Happy'" as in come back to where you went to college and find your "Happy Place".
Sadly, this was a few years ago, before the unhappiness hit Happy Valley...
Either way it's awful grammar.
Considering the content afterwards lends to the likeliness of intended past-tense, it could be "Find you WERE happy..."
I live in Pennsylvania. I am familiar with the writing expertise of the natives. It is most assuredly an apostrophe catastrophe.
Lesson to be learned here: "Ask Mr. Sandusky for final approval before placing ad."
It may have been a grammar "save," since it's possible to say "find you are happy in Happy Valley," but we all know it's an unintentional save.
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