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In the sentence 'We waters his lawn every so often,' why is 'waters' used instead of 'water'?

In the sentence 'We waters his lawn every so often,' why is 'waters' used instead of 'water'?

mey81
https://i.redd.it/sbq5skrm7ioe1.png

42 comments

Haven1820
Definitely a mistake. They were either going for 'he waters' or 'we water' and accidentally typed the wrong thing.
SnooDonuts6494
It's a typo. So is "someting".
teacup_tanuki
Because it's incorrect. "We water his lawn every so often." is correct English. There is the possibility that the "We" was a typo, because "He waters his lawn every so often." would be correct as well.
poodsforshort
This could be considered correct grammatically if We is a name/proper noun and not the plural pronoun
Key_Cardiologist5272
I hear this in a west country accent.
Smooth-Cicada-7784
Typo
NotQuiteinFocus
I actually read that with Gollum's voice in my head. Definitely a typo.
ThePikachufan1
mistake. it should be "water". unless you're gollum
PristineBaseball
It was suppose to say He waters his lawn
d09smeehan
The only way it works is if "We" is a person's name. But that would be an extremely unusual name in any english-speaking culture I know of, and a terrible choice for an example as you've found. More likely it's a typo and was supposed to say "**He** waters..."
EntropyTheEternal
It is supposed to be “he” because later it says “his”. If it was “We” it would have been “We water our lawn every so often.” Probably a typo or auto-incorrect.
allayarthemount
why nobody's talking about "every so often"? Don't tell me it's correct 😭
pigup1983
It’s wrong
Destructopoo
That's a typo. It's definitely "we water".
nicheencyclopedia
I can’t think of any context where this sentence would be grammatically correct. I’m assuming it’s a typo
Markipoo-9000
Replace “we” with “he.”
RoberttheRobot
if We is a proper name this sentence is grammatically correct.
helikophis
It's a typo - should be "He" not "We".
ThirdSunRising
Should be “He waters his lawn.” I suppose we could water his lawn too, if he asks nicely. Just a typo.
lincolnhawk
They forgot they wrote we and not he.
SusurrusLimerence
Cause it was written by Gollum.
memepotato90
They meant to write 'he' but if you go to the hood you'll hear this.
Jaives
two typos and a missing comma.
Foxtrot7888
It doesn’t make sense unless We is a person’s name.
Drew_2423
It is in some dialects, but not in standard English.
Tionetix
It has to be a typo. We = he
Darthplagueis13
Because the person who wrote it made a typo. Unless of course, the sentence is actually about a man named We, in which case the sentence would be correct.
TypeHonk
I've never seen anyone with the name We
Sudden_Outcome_9503
Either there is a man out there named "We", or this is a mistake.
SkeletonCalzone
We water our lawn every so often He waters his lawn every so often She waters her lawn every so often They water their lawn every so often It waters our lawn every so often *(if talking about something like an automatic sprinkler)*
AdreKiseque
Because it's wrong
zebostoneleigh
It's wrong.
PersonalityNo3044
If it truly was meant as “we water his lawn every so often.” (Because we are good neighbors, or we work for him or whatever) then the ‘s’ is dropped from waters because the verb should match the entity doing the verb. In “we water his lawn every so often.” we are the ones doing the verb “to water” so it is “we water” according to the general rules to conjugate verbs in English. -I water -you water -he/she waters -we water -they water *I’m not sure about the singular they. Should it be “they water their lawn” when the gender isn’t known or mentioned?
Dizzy_Guest8351
It's an error. 'Water' as verb should always agree with the subject.
RedTaxx
That’s something they would’ve said on The Color Purple tbh😭
ekkidee
"He waters his ..." or "we water our ..."
zeptozetta2212
Makes no sense. Had to be a typo.
DopazOnYouTubeDotCom
It should be we water.
OldandBlue
It should be "he waters his lawn..."
tweedtybird67
Because every so often is more than once, so he waterS. He will water his lawn and I will water my lawn are singular. He watered is past tense.
pm-ur-tiddys
not grammatically correct for standard, written English. HOWEVER, you might hear from someone who uses African-American Vernacular English (AAVE).
DemythologizedDie
It's probably intended to be southern Black dialect from some old novel the AI scraped for examples of the phrase. It is not correct standard English.