Interesting discussion!
Circling back to
Are the people who say "I could care less" speaking a different dialect from the people who say "I couldn't care less"? |
I would argue no. I am no language theory guy, so whatever that is worth, but mistakes (even if heavily confined to one region) are not generally going to be a real dialect**. In any flavor of english, those mean completely different things, and there are no two flavors where they mean the same thing in a formal setting.
in all versions, the first means you do care, at least some.
in all versions, the second means you do not care, at all.
only when branching out into the under-educated will someone try to argue they are the same, even when they are used that way in some casual speech.
** of course it depends on how you define dialect, too. If you follow that its how a language is spoken in one or more geographical region(s), then one person's gibberish isn't a dialect. In that sense, if everyone in a region makes the same mistake, it could be a part of the dialect even while being wrong/improper even where it is used, as in our example. There are areas where in casual speech the two phrases are treated as if they both mean you don't care at all, but in those same areas, if writing a grammatically correct paper or giving a speech to an educated audience, they are still wrong. I don't know what to say about that, other than its just people being people.
As far as it goes, I find mistakes funny, esp in journalism. Somewhere along the way, even though their degree specializes in communication, language, etc, the majority of writers and speakers in the news/media mess up constantly. A simple example is the word suspicious. If you are breaking into my neighbors window with a crowbar wearing a ski mask, *I* am suspicious. YOU are suspect. But they always make the perp suspicious (of what, is never clear).