Maybe this is just typical-minding, but I would guess that the median person might struggle to say which of faze/phase to put in their own writing but would happily go along with whichever one they encounter on an official-looking website without a second thought.
Yeah, I’d be pretty surprised if there’s any demographic slice who actually demand “phase” when “faze” is correct. The correlation between “bothers to have an opinion on correctness of others’ writing” and “knows what the correct answer actually is” seems too high.
It’s a little unfortunate, because I do think there might be an important point here, but the OP’s choice of example makes it harder for me to see. (Of course, it’s possible I’m just wrong, which would be interesting in its own right.)
The correlation between “bothers to have an opinion on correctness of others’ writing” and “knows what the correct answer actually is” seems too high.
(Edit: I’m reading between the lines and assuming you’re saying you think the cohort of people who actually care enough about faze/phase to be judgemental about it, but don’t themselves know the correct spelling is ‘faze’, is small.)
This is very interesting. I certainly agree this is our point of difference – I think there’s a big cohort out there with strong, judgey opinions about ‘correctness’ and an active interest in spelling and grammar as a way of displaying status. These people also happen to very frequently be wrong.
But this might well me me typical minding and I’ll try to think about this group more rigorously in my next post about this.
Maybe this is just typical-minding, but I would guess that the median person might struggle to say which of faze/phase to put in their own writing but would happily go along with whichever one they encounter on an official-looking website without a second thought.
Yeah, I’d be pretty surprised if there’s any demographic slice who actually demand “phase” when “faze” is correct. The correlation between “bothers to have an opinion on correctness of others’ writing” and “knows what the correct answer actually is” seems too high.
It’s a little unfortunate, because I do think there might be an important point here, but the OP’s choice of example makes it harder for me to see. (Of course, it’s possible I’m just wrong, which would be interesting in its own right.)
This is very interesting. I certainly agree this is our point of difference – I think there’s a big cohort out there with strong, judgey opinions about ‘correctness’ and an active interest in spelling and grammar as a way of displaying status. These people also happen to very frequently be wrong.
But this might well me me typical minding and I’ll try to think about this group more rigorously in my next post about this.