No sarcasm. Please explain.
Uhh....aw Christ. OK, if there is one right way to use English grammar and everything else is wrong, then what is that right way? And who decided it was right?
Hint: eventually my questioning is going to lead you to the conclusion that there is no "right way", in case you were wondering where this is going
Let me answer in plane English:
Wacob zoowal messonorus voloturb cuh jelfunt defmo. Makes sense right? I wrote it in English, because, according to you, English is whatever I want it to be because there is no "right way". And, I'd prefer if you spelled it
wqy, not
way, since again, according to you, no one can claim "way" is correct over "wqy".
Do you see where I am going with that? This time I
have used sarcasm to show that your argument is a little silly.
Sure, there is not a magical deity that declares the English language should be
like this or
like that. But thats the same with
anything.
Since the United States does not have an official language, we do not have an official agency dictating how American English should be used. Despite that, we have plenty of unofficial organizations that arbitrate our standard written English. You may consider school curricula and publishers as people 'with their panties in a twist' that pull the rules out of 'someone's ass' but I do not. The standard written English is derived by consensus and as such incorporates new trends and disputes, evolving over time.
This is unlike in French where there is an official group, the French Academy, that regulates the language as the sole decider of whats right and wrong.
Our spoken English is to the best of my knowledge completely un-regulated, even on an unofficial level but it is naturally derived from standard written English (Notice American schools don't teach you how to speak, only write?).
So, to directly answer your two questions
OK, if there is one right way to use English grammar and everything else is wrong, then what is that right way?
Standard written English
And who decided it was right?
A consensus among publishers and schools which is derived from common, popular usage and trends.
to finish:
Xeocatal mewyer zolfumbulto tur nolum haf du mehchul remy.