
Retired English Teacher
Yes. He disapproved of that rule, and he said it (somebody correcting his sentences so they were "correct" in that fashion) was something "up with which he would not put". (I'm paraphrasing.) He was making fun of the rule at the same time as he was expressing his displeasure with it.
~R
Wow, so I was right in my guessing. Thanks.It's really interesting, so interesting that I've just found a website on which the issue was commented on. Have a look yourself, if you like.
![]()
Language Log: A misattribution no longer to be put up with
Last edited by RonBee; 08-Sep-2007 at 19:29. Reason: correct a spelling mistake
Last edited by RonBee; 24-Jun-2007 at 23:25. Reason: correct a spelling mistake
I think RonBee is correct. ‘Put up with’ is commonly used to mean ‘tolerate’, ‘endure’ or ‘bear with patient’. It may be considered a phrasal verb by some but an idiom by other.
I'm not a teacher. I speak American English. I've tutored writing at the University of Southern Maine and have done a good deal of copy editing and writing, occasionally for publication.