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Subject:Grammar: "So" as a modifier? From:Geoff Hart <ghart -at- videotron -dot- ca> To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com> Date:Fri, 07 Oct 2005 10:09:33 -0400
Arroxane wonders: <<This time we discussed "so" as a modifier. For
example, "We are so lost" (instead of "very?) or "That is so an
inconvenience" (instead of "such"?). I commented that this usage was
incorrect, but really can't back it up with a grammatical rule.>>
The usage you're giving as an example is very "new-fashioned" and
considered informal because of its current association with youth-speak
("you are so hosed"). That's probably why you consider it to sound
"wrong"; good writers have a powerful "it looks funny" filter for words
in specific genres, such as formal writing.
If you never see it in typical technical documentation--which you
don't--it's wrong because it's not part of the standard vocabulary
readers have grown comfortable reading. But if you were writing docs
for 733T ("leet", the jargon such as "C U L8R" used by teens for
instant messaging), it might be perfectly appropriate in your
docs--provided you know how to talk the talk so that you don't sound
like an old fogey (me, for instance) trying to sound "hip". (You know
you're an old fogey if you use the word "hip". <g>
<<If a grammatical rule for this situation exists, I have forgotten
it.>>
One rule is probably more important than grammaer: know the language of
your audience. But the grammatical rule is that the "so" is serving
either as an adverb ("are so X", where "so" modifies the "are") or
adjective (so-called, where "so" modifies "called"), and so long as it
fits in the correct place for one of those word forms, it's a correct
use.
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