So this guy at Target

<p>I went to Target today with my Step dad.
At the register I saw the guys name was the same as my Step dad’s.
So I said “Look, his name’s Patrick too!”
And the guy said “His name is Patrick ALSO.”</p>

<p>Was the guy just being a dick, or was my grammar wrong? :(</p>

<p>I think the guy was being a dick.</p>

<p>Or maybe we’re both wrong? :(</p>

<p>I wouldn’t put “also” at the end of a sentence. I don’t think it’s grammatically incorrect, but it doesn’t sound pleasant.</p>

<p>But verbally correcting grammar annoys people.</p>

<p>Especially when the guy is a total stranger.</p>

<p>Neither is wrong. His sounds weirder.</p>

<p>You should have reminded him that he’s a cashier at Target.</p>

<p>i think he was correcting you when he said <em>name is</em> rather than <em>name’s</em></p>

<p>But they’re both correct. ^</p>

<p>

ROFL XD</p>

<p>Yeah, that too.</p>

<p>If it bothered you that much, you should have talked with his manager and said he harassed you. </p>

<p>Believe me, the customer is always right in these cases.</p>

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</p>

<p>You spoke my mind.</p>

<p>@tbolts856: haha, naw I’m not that kind of person. It’s no big deal. I was just curious if my grammar was right or not.</p>

<p>The only way you’d be wrong is if he somehow knew you were spelling it as “to” :P</p>

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<p>ZING! Nice.</p>

<p>does it really matter if he was correcting your grammar?
Sorry, no I don’t know whose grammer is right I’m terrible at that stuff.</p>

<p>yeah, you spelled the word two different ways in the same post.</p>

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<p>Lol, oh alright.</p>

<p>[ENGLISH</a> PAGE - Also / Too / Either](<a href=“http://www.englishpage.com/minitutorials/also.html]ENGLISH”>Also / Too / Either | ENGLISH PAGE)</p>

<p>I’m pretty sure either one is right. And it really doesn’t matter, no one is gonna care if you say too or also in normal everyday speech.</p>

<p>EDIT: Actually, it looks like “too” would be the right one in this case.</p>