jsburbidge: (Sky)
jsburbidge ([personal profile] jsburbidge) wrote2011-01-17 01:10 pm
Entry tags:

Grammar

I have heard/seen (once heard, once seen) media writers/readers use the form "big of a" today -- once on the CBC's Metro Morning (Matt Galloway) and once in a Globe and Mail article.

When I was growing up this formation was not possible. Now I seem to run into it in supposedly non-slangy contexts all over the place. It grates really seriously.

The CBC also had someone saying "like you and I". At least that is a venerable form, even if it elicits automatic talking back to the radio.

I'm not, as such, a prescriptivist, but the "big of a" usage seems to me to be disconnected from anything else I know in English grammar. It's like saying "how white of a piece of paper is it?"