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Playlist Common Grammar Mistakes 30 videos

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Its vs. It's
5830 Views

What’s the difference between its and it’s (spoiler alert: it’s more than just an apostrophe). This video covers the use of both of these wor...

1
Your vs. You're
4158 Views

Want even more deets on Your vs. You're? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

2
Affect vs. Effect
10818 Views

This video explains the difference between affect and effect and provide tips for remembering which is which and when to use each one. If you suffe...

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Literally 611 Views


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Description:

Want even more deets on "literally"? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Language:
English Language
Common Core Standards:

Transcript

00:01

Literally, a la Shmoop. Lots of people like to have fun with the word

00:09

“literally”. They throw it around like a baseball or a frisbee...

00:12

...never realizing that the word doesn't mean what they think it means.

00:15

“Literally” is defined as “in a literal sense”.

00:19

Need a shorter definition? “Literally” means “actually”...

00:23

…“exactly”...

00:24

…“for realz”. Here are some examples. The car literally

00:28

exploded when Toby turned the key in the ignition.

00:32

The fuzz literally showed up two minutes later...

00:35

...but there was literally nothing they could do.

00:37

Um, yeah, because you can't unscramble an egg.

00:42

Here's how not to use the word “literally” in everyday conversation...

00:46

...or against a Sicilian when death is on the line.

00:50

You might want to say, “Cindy's head literally exploded when she found out Bob was cheating

00:55

on her.”

00:56

But you don't mean that Cindy's head actually blew up.

00:59

You just mean that she was really, really angry at Bob, the two-timing twit.

01:03

We understand the temptation to use the word “literally” to spice up a sentence. All

01:08

the other kids are doing it, after all.

01:10

However, using “literally” as conversational cayenne is a big grammar no-no.

01:16

Just ask Vizzini. <<vuh-zee-nee>>

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