Who changes the rules of English grammar?
WASHINGTON, DC—The U.S. Grammar Guild Monday announced that no more will traditional grammar rules English follow. Instead there will a new form of organizing sentences be. Announces to reporters Joyce Watters grammar rules new English for. U.S. Grammar Guild is Watters president of. U.S. Grammar Guild according to, the new structure loosely on an obscure 800-year-old, pre-medieval Anglo-Saxon syntax is based. The syntax primarily verbs, verb clauses and adjectives at the end of sentences placing involves. Results this often, to ears American, a sentence backward appearing. “Operating under we are, one major rule,” said Joyce Watters, president of the U.S. Grammar Guild. “Make English, want we, more archaic and dignified sounding to be, as if every word coming from the tongue of a centuries-old, mystical wizard, is.” Brief pause Watters made then a. “Know I, know I,” said she. “Confusing sounds it, but every American used to it soon will be.” At a press conference recent greeted warmly