+361 It's annoying when people capitalize the wrong word in a sentence. Ex: "It's not my FAULT." amirite?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I know right? That's THE worst.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Seriously, I hate it when PEOPLE do that.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

What the hell is wrong WITH that?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

It should be: Its not MY fault! with emphasis on the "my"

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Um... Notice he put the emphasis on WITH when it shouldn't be. Jokes :P

by Anonymous 13 years ago

AM I DOING IT RIGHT?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

pahHAha this is an INTERESTING post. I read it NORMAL but when its in caps I start YELLING in my HEAD.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

There will be 20 more comments like the 5 above.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

What are you talking ABOUT?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

It's annoying when people use the wrong abbreviation in a sentence. e.g.. Ex: is not an abbreviation for example amirite?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

its annoying when somebody tries to correct somebody and gets it wrong. It's "eg" not "e.g". So I guess its a no way to your amirite comment

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I think you'll find it's e.g. not eg

by Anonymous 13 years ago

honestly, who cares?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Im just bored Arguing on the internet is like running in the special olympics

by Anonymous 13 years ago

oh, so i see..

by Anonymous 13 years ago

how is that the "wrong" word? if you were saying that sentence out loud, there's no reason why you couldn't emphasize the word "fault".

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Hopefully he means that "NOT" should be emphasized. Otherwise there is nothing wrong with it.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

well, it all depends on how you intend to say it. either word could be emphasized.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Or MY could be emphasized to be clear that it's somebody's fault, just not yours

by Anonymous 13 years ago

exactly, it all depends on what you intend to emphasize

by Anonymous 13 years ago

(mchristie):capitalizing on this website is essentially just a substitute for italics

by Anonymous 13 years ago

It's useful for emphasis.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

He/she means when they emphasize the wrong word.

by Anonymous 13 years ago