• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    102 months ago

    Is it actually incorrect? I don’t think it’s necessarily wrong, but it just sounds bizarre or Shakespearean if you use it when it’s not an auxiliary verb.

    “I’ve no need for that.” is a perfectly cromulent sentence.

    • Billegh
      link
      fedilink
      52 months ago

      Yeah, not “incorrect,” just non-standard. The yardstick is: did your interpretation match the intended one? Clearly, he was able to get there so it’s firmly in “acceptable use.” Any further whinging about grammar is likely to just be construed as gatekeeping.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        12 months ago

        I’m a prescriptivist and I think it’s fine. I suspect it might be a British vs American English thing.

        • LordWarfire
          link
          fedilink
          English
          42 months ago

          As a native BrE speaker I’d say “I’ve X installed” is a little weird, fine in speech but written down it doesn’t look right. “I’ve installed X” is fine.

      • @mnemonicmonkeys
        link
        English
        02 months ago

        The yardstick is: did your interpretation match the intended one?

        I think that’s just you. There’s a few examples of rules in English that aren’t required to get a point across, but sentences that break them sound grating. One such example is adjective order

        • Billegh
          link
          fedilink
          02 months ago

          I think you’re conflating correctness with comprehension. Even if it isn’t correct, you could still be understood.

          • @mnemonicmonkeys
            link
            English
            -22 months ago

            Per your previous comment:

            Yeah, not “incorrect,” just non-standard. The yardstick is:

            Clearly, he was able to get there so it’s firmly in “acceptable use.”

            I’m not the one conflating the two concepts.