He left out-"not for nothin but" (what does that even mean?), "Supposively", "aks" instead of 'ask'as well as two famous ones here in the south:[sentence example] "Do you have health IN-surance?"When asking one to repeat something they couldn't hear:"Do what now?" Do? I didn't say 'do' anything. And finally, the 7 dislikes are clearly repeat offenders..and are offended..lol
I've never said "all of the sudden". I try not to say "a whole 'nother". I do use the word "irregardless" ironically and sometimes just to piss people off.
@ApatheticBacon Thanks. I cant believe Ive gotten to this stage in life without realizing that. Just one of those things I guess... A very, very depressing thing...
@kur1tan The context. When someone says something like "You should take better care of you're boots" or "They are doing they're job". I assume that's what it sounds like to them in spoken language and then they spell it the same way when writing/typing.
@ghofspa1 I still may not be following you. They are classic examples of homonyms. They sound alike. "You're" and "your" are pronounced identically, as are "they're" and "their." So "saying" them is not a problem.
I presume that by "says", you meant "writes" when you wrote:
"This also should apply to anyone that says "you're" instead of "your" and "they're" instead of "their"."
am i the only one who thinks the top comment was corny .. and to be honest the vid itself isnt that funny pretty sure stewie had funnier stuff but yeah w.e
Another phrase that annoys me is used by Americans a lot, and that's "I could care less" It's supposed to be "I couldn't care less" Think about it! But there is so much misuse of the English language out there, I'm probably guilty of some myself
That list should include people who would misspell a moderately common word and take extra time to write a disclaimer in parenthesis stating "or however the fuck u spell it", instead of taking two seconds to google for the correct way.
@akatsuki20113 i bet u feel all fking mighty picking on someone online coodos to u im sure in person u wont dare speak in that manner so really just stop the bull it makes u seem like a punk to be quite honest
@Kamorok NO NO NO nothing like that its just that people just use the way other people spell things and short and just keeps using it and using it and using the word until you actually forget how to spell the correct word so stop spelling words in short and use the correct words trust me and fyi if it were in real life i would definitely speak in the previous manner why well no actually i would run away like a bitch cuudos
irregardless, stewie opened up a whole nother can of worms by making these rules. He thought he was in charge, then all of the sudden lois comes in and kicks his ass.
Don't like sentence fragments. Find them really annoying. Think Stewie should ban them. Prefer it when people use complete sentences.
Holy crap, that sounds annoying. But seriously, if they are going to amend the constitution, it should be OK to infringe on people's freedom of speech if they use sentence fragments. It's not that hard to type the letter i.
@1jmanrules Irregardless IS NOT a real word. It doesn't even make any sense.
The prefix "ir-" clearly means "not", like how "irrelevant" means "not relevant". But "regardless" means "without regard to", so "irregardless" means "not without regard to". It's a blatant double-negative, and I don't get why people even consider the term the least validated.
Common usage does not superceed the rules of grammar and basic logic. :)
@TheSeldomSeenDude common usage is how the rules of grammar are formed. and do you really think english follows basic logic?
I don't say "irregardless" but I can see why some people do, and in the future it will probably become accepted as gramatically correct. People don't think about prefixes and such every time they talk. Besides, there are plenty of words with prefixes that don't make sense, like "inflammable".
@scwt89 The "in" in "inflammable" isn't a prefix and it doesn't mean un-flammable or non-flammable, it's a preposition. It means in or into. It's not necessary to add it because it pretty much means the exact same thing as flammable, but it does make sense.
Add the use of the phrase "to beg the question" to mean "to raise the question" to the list of crimes against humanity. Even Jon Stewart does it on the Daily Show. I used to like him.
@kerrywsmyth That is true, but also irrelevant. The use of beg the question to mean raise the question is still incorrect use of the phrase. Perhaps not grammatically, as you pointed out, but semantically nonetheless. It would be harder to put in the list, because it requires context to be recognized as used correct or incorrectly. So if that's what you mean, you're right. Still I think Stewie would agree with me that incorrect beg the questioners should be put to hard labor for life.
Stewie needs to make a 2011 version of this list to ban people who make jokes about the number of dislikes a video has. They need an instant death penalty without a trial.
I did a search for whole nother and found this. Stewie is right. I would vote for him. People who say any of those things need to get hit with one of Peter's thinking grenades.
@mazza56 Actually, if you look into it, you'll discover American English is more pure than British English. In addition to grammatical misuses, introduction of slang terms, and tenses being abolished, pronunciation has gone completely down the toilet. The adding and subtracting of "R" sounds, e.g. "Americer" and "ovah theah", is probably the most prominent. This is "respectable" British English and not some white-trash Cockney accent, which could be understandable and possibly excusable.
@Karaokephile I'm all for Americans speaking what they want when they want, how they want.
But it irritates me when I hear British people using words they've heard on American TV programs, such as 'Seldomly', the mispronunciation of schedule, and even incorrect spelling such as color.
this article on the daily mail website says it all...
@mazza56 The way the British spell colour is not incorrect. The standard English spellings such as centre instead of center, programme instead of program and colour, favour, neighbour etc. existed long before Merriam-Webster came along and changed them. You'll probably find that most English speaking countries spell these words using standard English, not American (Webster's) English.
@MLCE79 lol, It's become apparent neither colour nor color is incorrect.
I would hope that most English speaking countries learn English not American English. The problem lies with in British schools where the teachers employed don't know the difference. This is where the real trouble starts, and unfortunately, it's a vicious cycle.
But now we're getting onto a completely different matter entirely.
@mazza56 Thanks for your reply. It definitely clarifies what was already perfectly clear in the comment I was replying to. That'll teach me to read and respond to people's comments before I'm fully awake. Oops. As a Canadian teacher who has always used the Queen's English, but whose co-workers cannot say the same, I fully understand and share in your frustrations.
@Karaokephile I'm all for Americans speaking what they want when they want, how they want.
But it irritates me when I hear British people using words they've heard on American TV programs, such as 'Seldomly', the mispronunciation of schedule, and even incorrect spelling such as color.
this article on the daily mail website says it all...
I think he means when people explicitly spell it as "should of" on their Facebook statuses or YouTube comments or wherever, rather than when they actually say it.
I have to agree with him as well, it annoys me the most.
anybody notice at staven888's comment i just dont care
redbullwings11 4 days ago
why are the top comments usually the most brainless things that can be possibly fucking said??
slimshawn77 4 days ago
They used this to replace the song in the UK version... :-/ good job I bought the DVD :D
thefartydoctor 1 week ago
Irregardless. There, I said it.
kooora18 3 weeks ago
Stalwie.
spanish111japan 3 weeks ago
/Is it wrong that i'm more afriad of stewies law than the NDAA
MrPhilliesfan18 1 month ago
Stewie wants to send people to a work camp.
Mr007Chief 1 month ago
0:08
glem64 1 month ago
Anyone notice that there wasn't a 0:10
tenmaruhakuchou 2 months ago 4
He left out-"not for nothin but" (what does that even mean?), "Supposively", "aks" instead of 'ask'as well as two famous ones here in the south:[sentence example] "Do you have health IN-surance?"When asking one to repeat something they couldn't hear:"Do what now?" Do? I didn't say 'do' anything. And finally, the 7 dislikes are clearly repeat offenders..and are offended..lol
pema40 2 months ago
Whatever you say, boss.
TheAlien659 2 months ago
well... i'm doomed :S
TheAwesomoe 2 months ago
Stewie, the grammar nazi
TrollingDayAndNight 2 months ago
I've never said "all of the sudden". I try not to say "a whole 'nother". I do use the word "irregardless" ironically and sometimes just to piss people off.
WarEmu7 3 months ago
Comment removed
Asemahdi3 3 months ago
I get the last two, but what the fuck is wrong with "Irregardless"?
7CellarDoors 3 months ago
@7CellarDoors Moron
maruceki 3 months ago
@7CellarDoors
its a double negative, its just regardless
ApatheticBacon 3 months ago 3
@ApatheticBacon Thanks. I cant believe Ive gotten to this stage in life without realizing that. Just one of those things I guess... A very, very depressing thing...
7CellarDoors 3 months ago
Yes!!!!
Kaithdynn 3 months ago
This also should apply to anyone that says "you're" instead of "your" and "they're" instead of "their".
ghofspa1 3 months ago
@ghofspa1 How do you know if "their" saying one or the other?
kur1tan 3 months ago
@kur1tan The context. When someone says something like "You should take better care of you're boots" or "They are doing they're job". I assume that's what it sounds like to them in spoken language and then they spell it the same way when writing/typing.
ghofspa1 3 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@ghofspa1 I still may not be following you. They are classic examples of homonyms. They sound alike. "You're" and "your" are pronounced identically, as are "they're" and "their." So "saying" them is not a problem.
I presume that by "says", you meant "writes" when you wrote:
"This also should apply to anyone that says "you're" instead of "your" and "they're" instead of "their"."
kur1tan 3 months ago
Anyone notice that 00.08 isn't there?
staven888 3 months ago 72
@staven888 that's nothing special. almost every bloody video is missing the second before the last one.
Randomizer903 3 months ago
@staven888 lol yeah what's up withthat?
DimitarUnbreakable 3 months ago
@staven888 wowwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww thats just amazing...
AnimeForever95 3 months ago
@staven888 well now you have 0:08
Asemahdi3 3 months ago
@staven888 the second before the last second is never there............
lagreify 3 months ago
@staven888 maybe right 0:08 correctly moron i mean it's right in front of your fkin face in the video.
123codename1232 3 months ago
@staven888 hurr hurr hurr
sweet58441 2 months ago
@staven888 Hit 9 quickly to see 0:08 . It's there... waiting to be seen.
EmperorAst 2 months ago
@staven888 irregardless of putting a whole 'nother 0 on 0:08 all of a sudden 0:008 is gone :|
DrinkToIreland 1 month ago
I agree with him.
Beatnikzombie 3 months ago
wtf i hate it the top comments are the same
Banana1344 4 months ago
am i the only one who thinks the top comment was corny .. and to be honest the vid itself isnt that funny pretty sure stewie had funnier stuff but yeah w.e
Kamorok 4 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
STEWIE:what you mean you don't agree with me!
madnessfan218 4 months ago
Irregardless, that's a hole nother side of Stewie that we love all of the sudden.
DaveScott69 4 months ago
can someone plz explain to methe joke im srry but i dont rlly get it
mnsupersuperman 4 months ago
you also forgot that all people must throw apples at peter griffin :D
gregg1944553 4 months ago
Another phrase that annoys me is used by Americans a lot, and that's "I could care less" It's supposed to be "I couldn't care less" Think about it! But there is so much misuse of the English language out there, I'm probably guilty of some myself
TheTalkingCamera 4 months ago
STEWIE JUST SAID THAT!!! Take it home with ya!
josh9180 4 months ago
Stewie for preisdent.....sh*t would change...
MrSwaper619 4 months ago
how about half of the sudden instead?
ghofspa1 4 months ago
- People who say "His" instead of "He is" shouldn't be sent to a work camp, they should be sent to breathe gas.
Francisah 4 months ago
Irregardless, All of the sudden, I felt like watching a Whole 'Notha Video like this.
toontownpenny8 4 months ago 2
@toontownpenny8 bad copypasta bro
Spandex08 3 months ago
Looks like Keegan Michael Key will be the first guy sent to a work camp (MADtv "Whole 'notha level" skit).
neilhd100 4 months ago
how about "he Come up to me" instead of "he CAME up to me."
rejuised 4 months ago
What episode is this from - does anyone know?
heyhey929 4 months ago
@heyhey929 lois kills stewie
mnsupersuperman 4 months ago
Well, irregardless, all of the sudden I feel like watching a whole 'nother video.
trewerd 4 months ago 131
@trewerd So i guess you sir are in a Work camp now?
Mazak4able 3 months ago
@trewerd goodbye
qnteban1L2P 2 months ago
@trewerd Could you open your front door please? Train's here >:)
KingHarkinian 2 months ago
hey, hey, hey, irregardless, a whole nother, all of the sudden
red12344321t 4 months ago
STEWIE JUST SAID THAT !
K1v1rand 4 months ago
All of the sudden... I am at a work camp.
newscomedyCP 4 months ago
I hate it when people say "I could care less" when they mean "I could NOT care less"
trevorclive 4 months ago
He forgot about people who use the word 'party' as a verb.
Calummcntsh6 4 months ago
@Calummcntsh6 you don't party much, do you?
trevorclive 4 months ago
@trevorclive Now you come to mention it, no! lol But that doesn't stop it being an annoying saying.
Calummcntsh6 4 months ago
All of the sudden...
MultiNatlie 5 months ago
That list should include people who would misspell a moderately common word and take extra time to write a disclaimer in parenthesis stating "or however the fuck u spell it", instead of taking two seconds to google for the correct way.
championofcathay 5 months ago
@championofcathay your rite. (or however the fuck u spell it.)
VobisPacem 5 months ago
@VobisPacem right is how you spell it douche bag
akatsuki20113 4 months ago
@akatsuki20113 i bet u feel all fking mighty picking on someone online coodos to u im sure in person u wont dare speak in that manner so really just stop the bull it makes u seem like a punk to be quite honest
Kamorok 4 months ago
@Kamorok NO NO NO nothing like that its just that people just use the way other people spell things and short and just keeps using it and using it and using the word until you actually forget how to spell the correct word so stop spelling words in short and use the correct words trust me and fyi if it were in real life i would definitely speak in the previous manner why well no actually i would run away like a bitch cuudos
akatsuki20113 4 months ago
Irregardless of what Stewie is saying here, I believe my language is on a whole nother level to yours. All of the sudden I don't care what he says.
PowerThrash 5 months ago 5
Irregardless of what Stewie is saying here, I believe my language is on a whole nother level to yours. All of the sudden I don't care what he says.
PowerThrash 5 months ago
STEWIE 4 PRESIDENT
holsteingirl17 5 months ago 2
Regardless of this video. all of a sudden i watched it again in a whole other tab :D
ktockly 5 months ago
still better than bush
themesiasinrs 5 months ago
whoeva saw peter griffin, throw apple at him >:(
QN8375 5 months ago
2 people got sent to a work camp
DarkAnge107 5 months ago
THANK YOU FOR THIS!!!!!!
LeftEye2pac 6 months ago
Whice episode is this?
Ipodmoeilijk 6 months ago
@Ipodmoeilijk, "Lois kills Stewie"
LeftEye2pac 6 months ago
@LeftEye2pac
Thx!
Ipodmoeilijk 6 months ago
@Ipodmoeilijk lois kills stewie i think
brendyjames234 6 months ago
Irrregardless isn't a a word that's a double negative
Ohiomachinerocks 6 months ago
@Ohiomachinerocks yeah, thats the point of this video....lol
TheChipAndSkip 6 months ago
irregardless, stewie opened up a whole nother can of worms by making these rules. He thought he was in charge, then all of the sudden lois comes in and kicks his ass.
TheBlueflame25 6 months ago
all of a sudden I thought bout saying all of a sudden.
BlackHero22 6 months ago
lol workcamp
69sniperghost 7 months ago
Stewie for President!!!
terrencejohnson23 7 months ago
this is so "irregardless" of a "wholenother" which makes me all of the sudden.
Death camp rocks!
cattoncarper 7 months ago
reminds me of the Middle East.
fsjal117 7 months ago
@fsjal117 Reminds me of Texas and southern White folks, lulzz! =)
JIMINIK1 6 months ago
YAY i never use any of these words :)
TheIcelandicPatriot 7 months ago
British Grammar Nazis brought me here!
DrJowenz 8 months ago
All of the sudden, I reached a whole 'nother level of being irregardless.
jaydude32lmaster33 9 months ago
Don't like sentence fragments. Find them really annoying. Think Stewie should ban them. Prefer it when people use complete sentences.
Holy crap, that sounds annoying. But seriously, if they are going to amend the constitution, it should be OK to infringe on people's freedom of speech if they use sentence fragments. It's not that hard to type the letter i.
spinemelter2000 9 months ago
He says "all of THE sudden" not "all of A sudden"
anchgu7 9 months ago
If the goverment of the USA just listen to this....
DarkHeroMachine 10 months ago
Irregardless of what Stewie thinks, there's a whole 'nother list of words all of the sudden that also needs to be removed.
Amar7605 10 months ago
@Amar7605 pack your stuff you're going to a "vacation"
0live0wire0 8 months ago
Its not about language people these phrases are just annoying for some people... for example I hate it when people sayy "same difference"
garoosh05 10 months ago
1. Irregardless- is a real word
2.All of a sudden- nothing wrong with this
3. A whole nother- i don't cARE ABOUT
4. Freedom of speech
take that b*tch
1jmanrules 10 months ago
@1jmanrules irregardless is a false blending of the words regardless and irrespective.
hassan1992 9 months ago
@1jmanrules Irregardless IS NOT a real word. It doesn't even make any sense.
The prefix "ir-" clearly means "not", like how "irrelevant" means "not relevant". But "regardless" means "without regard to", so "irregardless" means "not without regard to". It's a blatant double-negative, and I don't get why people even consider the term the least validated.
Common usage does not superceed the rules of grammar and basic logic. :)
TheSeldomSeenDude 9 months ago
@TheSeldomSeenDude common usage is how the rules of grammar are formed. and do you really think english follows basic logic?
I don't say "irregardless" but I can see why some people do, and in the future it will probably become accepted as gramatically correct. People don't think about prefixes and such every time they talk. Besides, there are plenty of words with prefixes that don't make sense, like "inflammable".
scwt89 8 months ago
@scwt89 The "in" in "inflammable" isn't a prefix and it doesn't mean un-flammable or non-flammable, it's a preposition. It means in or into. It's not necessary to add it because it pretty much means the exact same thing as flammable, but it does make sense.
cornnog 7 months ago
@1jmanrules All of a sudden is correct. All of THE sudden is incorrect.
Zaxtur 9 months ago
so that's how Grammar Police was created...
cutiknet 10 months ago
this clip is correct iregardless of the miss use of the english language it produces a whole nother argument then all of a sudden makes more problems
thank you president stewie
0946218123 11 months ago
I never thought about how wrong "a whole nother" was until I saw this video.
But irregardless, "all of a sudden" is used by everyone, period.
kerrywsmyth 1 year ago
@kerrywsmyth lol thats because that is a correct way of saying it. all of THE sudden is the wrong way
sc0rpi0n1990 10 months ago
Add the use of the phrase "to beg the question" to mean "to raise the question" to the list of crimes against humanity. Even Jon Stewart does it on the Daily Show. I used to like him.
zeijedatnietnetookal 1 year ago
@zeijedatnietnetookal There is a difference between Stewie's phrases and yours. Stewie's are grammatically incorrect. Yours are not.
kerrywsmyth 1 year ago
@kerrywsmyth That is true, but also irrelevant. The use of beg the question to mean raise the question is still incorrect use of the phrase. Perhaps not grammatically, as you pointed out, but semantically nonetheless. It would be harder to put in the list, because it requires context to be recognized as used correct or incorrectly. So if that's what you mean, you're right. Still I think Stewie would agree with me that incorrect beg the questioners should be put to hard labor for life.
zeijedatnietnetookal 1 year ago
Stewie needs to make a 2011 version of this list to ban people who make jokes about the number of dislikes a video has. They need an instant death penalty without a trial.
spinemelter2000 1 year ago
We need to add 'alot' to this list, as well as not knowing the difference between then and than.
allrequiredfields 1 year ago
all of the sudden there is a whole nother law called freedom of speech, irregardless of what stewie says.
potterbond 1 year ago 20
The work camp is McDonalds.
MrBolaSete11 1 year ago
Lol, I just heard someone on cops say irregardless....the word just sounds so wrong
mskinkybeauty 1 year ago
I did a search for whole nother and found this. Stewie is right. I would vote for him. People who say any of those things need to get hit with one of Peter's thinking grenades.
spinemelter2000 1 year ago
hmm stalin junior?
outskool100 1 year ago
what episode of what season is it?????
yanivideo 1 year ago
All of the sudden, Stewie made an iregardless law that's meant for a whole nother world to use...
Btw, all of the sudden iregardless a whole nother.
nigahiiiga 1 year ago
sunburnt
kerplnk57 1 year ago
All of the suddden stwie made iragrdless laws a whole nother world away
shadowboy8456 1 year ago
hate when people say "not necessarily" when they mean "not particularly"
dodaj90068 1 year ago
the real problem is all the americanisms coming across the channel destroying the queens english via the media!!
another that really really annoys me though.... "I ain't got none"
mazza56 1 year ago
This. And also when people say "I generally do" when they clearly mean "I GENUINELY do"
wardie230 1 year ago
@wardie230 Never heard that one.
paolo27th 1 year ago
@wardie230
jesusisjustaname 1 year ago
@wardie230 clever
jesusisjustaname 1 year ago
@mazza56 Actually, if you look into it, you'll discover American English is more pure than British English. In addition to grammatical misuses, introduction of slang terms, and tenses being abolished, pronunciation has gone completely down the toilet. The adding and subtracting of "R" sounds, e.g. "Americer" and "ovah theah", is probably the most prominent. This is "respectable" British English and not some white-trash Cockney accent, which could be understandable and possibly excusable.
Karaokephile 1 year ago
@Karaokephile I'm all for Americans speaking what they want when they want, how they want.
But it irritates me when I hear British people using words they've heard on American TV programs, such as 'Seldomly', the mispronunciation of schedule, and even incorrect spelling such as color.
this article on the daily mail website says it all...
dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1282449/Americanisms-swamping-English-wake-smell-coffee.html
mazza56 1 year ago
@mazza56 The way the British spell colour is not incorrect. The standard English spellings such as centre instead of center, programme instead of program and colour, favour, neighbour etc. existed long before Merriam-Webster came along and changed them. You'll probably find that most English speaking countries spell these words using standard English, not American (Webster's) English.
MLCE79 1 year ago
@MLCE79 lol, It's become apparent neither colour nor color is incorrect.
I would hope that most English speaking countries learn English not American English. The problem lies with in British schools where the teachers employed don't know the difference. This is where the real trouble starts, and unfortunately, it's a vicious cycle.
But now we're getting onto a completely different matter entirely.
mazza56 1 year ago
@mazza56 Thanks for your reply. It definitely clarifies what was already perfectly clear in the comment I was replying to. That'll teach me to read and respond to people's comments before I'm fully awake. Oops. As a Canadian teacher who has always used the Queen's English, but whose co-workers cannot say the same, I fully understand and share in your frustrations.
MLCE79 1 year ago
@Karaokephile I'm all for Americans speaking what they want when they want, how they want.
But it irritates me when I hear British people using words they've heard on American TV programs, such as 'Seldomly', the mispronunciation of schedule, and even incorrect spelling such as color.
this article on the daily mail website says it all...
dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1282449/Americanisms-swamping-English-wake-smell-coffee.html
Do you use the Oxford English Dictionary?
mazza56 1 year ago
Can we get "should of" (and other uses of the word "of" when what they really mean is "have") added onto this too? That is my biggest pet peeve.
allisonaxe 2 years ago 36
The problem is there`s so much misuse of the English language out there that if they included it all this scene would have been endless.
paolo27th 2 years ago 22
@paolo27th but I think you'll agree, that endless scene of misuse would be classic Family Guy, haha.
brant64 6 months ago
@paolo27th well then smarty pants shouldnt it be there is?
Blackhawksfan1993 5 months ago
@allisonaxe: I completely agree!! The could OF /should OF instead of HAVE irritates me to no end!
LeftyBlue 2 years ago
@allisonaxe EXACTLY what I was going to say. That is, in fact, the reason I searched for this video.
FlopperCab 1 year ago
@allisonaxe yeah dude i hate that too....i think they just never understood people were saying "should've"
LebronMVP4LIFE 9 months ago
@allisonaxe i think they're using the contraction "should've" not "should of."
8Splendiferous8 8 months ago
@8Splendiferous8
I think he means when people explicitly spell it as "should of" on their Facebook statuses or YouTube comments or wherever, rather than when they actually say it.
I have to agree with him as well, it annoys me the most.
free2pzwn 8 months ago
@free2pzwn it annoys me the most when people say "was" as opposed to "were."
8Splendiferous8 8 months ago
@free2pzwn another pet peeve of mine is being called a he.
allisonaxe 5 months ago
@allisonaxe "should've" and "should of" do sound almost identical when said out loud. If they spell it like that, well that's a different story.
mjfraser04 5 months ago
@allisonaxe I don't think anyone says "Should of" it's just when you shorten "should have" into "should've" it kinda sounds as should of
NDC49 4 months ago
@NDC49 According to Firefox, should've isn't a word.
spinemelter2000 4 months ago
Thank you so MUCH this is exactly the clip I needed
cory640 2 years ago 38