What I pointed out wasn't google's order of hits, I mentioned the total number of indexed articles in existence
Google doesn't contain the entire database of mankind nor does it show all of it.
The indexed internet may not contain every word ever written, but several billion indexed articles are more than enough to count as a statistical sample. Unless you can show some evidence that the index articles on the 'net are massively biased in some specific way that supports your argument about "get to" vs "get into".
Aaaand doesn't show the stuff it deems UNWORTHY. Hence, deep web.
Again, where's your evidence that google has a bias against phrases of the form "it's cheaper to get into London" or "it's cheaper to get into Australia" vs the much more common "it's cheaper to get to London" or "it's cheaper to get to Australia"
If you can't show some reason or evidence for the bias, attacking google is a ridiculous line of argument. If google somehow believes articles that contain your chosen grammar are "unworthy" why would that be? it's not like I personally rigged all the articles indexed by Google to win this argument.
I showed that one form of the statement was massively more common than the other, your response is that the entire internet is rigged against you?
When thirteen million separate articles in the world contain the exact phrase "i got to my destination", and only nine total contain "i got into my destination" (a factor of over 1 million to 1), it's disingenuous to go "pfft! online English sucks".
Ahem.
You.
Tube.
When 6 billion fanatics scream the sky is falling down...
Is the sky falling down?
I showed that the 13 million statements exist (and only 9 for the alternate formulation), since this is an argument about
language usage, it makes no sense to argument about the veracity of the statements, since the existence of the
statements in the first place, is what is under debate.
The existence of 6 billion youtube fanatics screaming "the sky is falling down..."
proves that there are 6 billion youtube fanatics screaming "the sky is falling down...".
An analogy to this line of debate, would be me arguing "everyone says 'the moon is made of green cheese' " and me providing evidence that they do indeed say that. and you respond "but the moon isn't made of green cheese, so you're wrong!". but I never claimed that it was in actuality made of cheese, I just claimed that people said that it was (the same as your youtube users screaming about the sky falling).
Google hits includes uploaded printed books, etc.
Twilight is a printed book; ergo Twilight sets the precedent for what counts as proper grammar.
Wow, that's an
exceptionally poor form of argument. I'm arguing from the collection of billions of index English pages & texts, fiction and non-fiction, and you can only counter with "Twilight sets the precedent for what counts as proper grammar".
That's like me saying "50 million people voted for Obama" and you countering with "i know a guy who's a moron who voted for Obama,
therefore that one moron got Obama elected". Actually, it was him, plus the other 50 million people. By the same argument Twilight plus the several billion other pages in English reflect and influence normal usage.
Is something slang if 99.9999% of people consider it normal usage?
Yes. Anyone who says Chav in the UK would know what it means; by no means is it more than slang though.
So the phrase "how to i
get to the shops from here" is "slang", or somehow unusual, in the same sense as "Chav" is?
The majority will and can often get things wrong. Like maths, people are not born with a comprehensive grasp of how to do it.
The majority of people will not share the same access of education, nor will most express this on the internet.
You are searching for a word that will get used far less than another. If I search "AND" as opposed to "FURTHERMORE", I get 21 billion hits as opposed to 201 million.
With 13 million utterances for "i got to my destination" vs 9, for "i got into my destination", that makes the first one standard usage.
Also, the very common "How do i get to..."
Ok, show me a source which clarifies this. You haven't liked my examples showing it's common usage, you say one is considered incorrect, whilst the other is considered correct. So show me proof.
BTW "furthermore" does not always make much sense to always replace "and":
"Fish
furthermore chips"?
"A mop
furthermore a bucket"?