Grammar Need Not Be Cruel to Be Cool

Many grammar geeks tend to be snobby about corrected incorrect grammar. I try not to be. It depends on who the person is and my relationships to them. If I’m writing a general article to an open audience, I try to have fun and in some cases, come across as the grammar police.
Grammar Snobs Are Great Big Meanies: A Guide to Language for Fun and SpiteChangeThis features Grammar Need Not Be Cruel to Be Cool by June Casagrande author of Grammar Snobs Are Great Big Meanies: A Guide to Language for Fun and Spite. She shares a story about writing to the author of an article who despised split infinitives. Personally, I think split infinitives work and sound better in some cases.
After all, what if the Star Trek voice over said, “To go boldly where no man has gone before… ?” I think plugging “boldly” in between “to” and “go” makes a bigger impact.
Casagrande also discusses the use of “A’s” and “B’s” as opposed to “As” and “Bs.” In the past, I stated that I don’t like apostrophes with anything plural unless it belongs to the object. However, “As” and “Bs” sure looks like “as” and “bs” and B grades aren’t B.S. So I’m OK with “A’s” and “1’s.” Some numbers like 1 look like a letter, so the apostrophe helps distinguish it as a number.
Casagrande and I share the same philosophy regarding grammar. She closes the article:

But if we can avoid the temptation of grammar snobbery, if we can give ourselves permission to make mistakes, if we can think of grammar as a tool or even a toy, well, that’s when grammar really can be cool.

Amen.
I’m sure I have plenty of grammar errors and typos throughout this blog, but it’s a blog not formally written articles with an editor on call. Grammar snobs disagree with that.
Eats, Shoots  &  Leaves: Why, Commas Really Do Make a Difference!By the way, it looks like Lynne Truss is trying to get kids into the grammar game with a children’s book version of her best seller Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation.