As a longtime copy editor and self-proclaimed “ grammar enforcer ,” I’ve always believed mistakes mattered. I side-eye every error I spot in books, magazines, Facebook posts and texts—even on restaurant menus. I’ve always thought that clean, correct writing wasn’t negotiable. Now, that expectation seems to be sliding. Messages are faster, looser and a lot messier. Lowercase letters slip in . Autocorrect goes unchecked. Terminal punctuation is left off. And instead of standing out, these imperfections often blend right in. In some cases, they even send a message of their own. So when I started seeing typos framed as a good thing—somehow signaling status or authenticity—I was horrified, and I had questions. Are people really embracing messy writing? Or are we just getting used to it? To understand what’s driving the shift, I spoke to Mignon Fogarty, aka Grammar Girl, and Amy Gallo, a workplace communications expert and Harvard Business Review contributor. Read on to find out wheth...
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