In which varieties of English is it common to front predicates as in the sentence "Bought a nice house, he did."? In which pragmatic contexts is this done in these varieties?
It was argued on a question once that syntax and word-order are not the same thing, yet I see these tags used both in the same questions.
What do the community think about this?
If they are the same thing, then we should remove one.
If they are not the same thing, then they shouldn't always ...
You can post an observation in your answer, it will add some value, if it's closely related to what you just said. Like "oh for example I'm a native speaker in (language) and what I just said in my answer is present there too"
But there are places for the different kinds of information
It's not that you can't post a related question. You can but not in all situations and not in all places.
For example, you could say "As I said in (this other answer-link), bla bla"
but not just a single line linking a question like that. If you tell me what you meant to link specifically, we can re-add it
You said "but people have different opinions and sometimes think that certain remarks are more off-topic than others might perceive them to be", but that's the point. It's not just my opinion. I'm applying rules. I'm enforcing them.
That depends. They're not that strict... At the beginning you might find the editing weird, many do, you're not the only one, but trust me, you'll see it won't do your answers any harm.
@KamilStachowski Absolutely not! :D I edit many answers and I don't always know everything.
I'm not correcting your info, I'm correcting some uses of the system. If you make a typo, I'll fix it. But the best thing is that you can do the same with me.
If I make a typo, you can (and must) correct my answer.
but at the same time you corrected my sentence, and that i'm not fine with at all
kk, i'll write my thoughts in the meantime
Now, that sentence of mine wasn't rude, it wasn't offensive, it wasn't misleading, it wasn't wrong in any obvious way. Why change it? Why not let me have it my way?
You changed it to something else, which isn't exactly the way I
'd put it (I'd write gave rather than wrote).
It's not so much the specific edit that I object to (apart from the one time when it actually changed the meaning), but the general fact that my sentences are changed.
ok, what if someone starts mailciously editing my posts after i will have stopped using the site? i won't know and won't be able to report that, so the wrong text will stay forever with my name under it
but this is the internet; people google a name, open twenty sites and when they find the right post, they read every second word from it, without bothering to check what this particular site works like and whether editors are here more or less zealous
that's how false impressions arise, and that's what i'm afraid of
Uhm, not sure if there is something. Go to the Meta StackOverflow site and browse there. That is the Meta site for all of the SE sites, so maybe someone asked the same thing you did. Try searching there.
I have some difficulty understanding the position of adjectives.
In English I have to put the adjective before the referred name (e.g., I'm an Italian man).
In some languages (as Italian or Ancient Greek), the adjective (or another grammatical element) can have two positions:
attributive: "gli...