A Door Sign
A few days ago, the senior assistant for curriculum of my school put up a sign on the front door of the teachers' staffroom.It read, " Please always keep the door closed".
The sign caught the attention of all the English teachers.
Teacher A: " The sentence is wrong. It should have been: Please keep the door closed always."
Teacher B: "No, it should have been Please keep the door closed. The word 'always' is not necessary."
An hour later.
Teacher C: "My goodness, see how wrong the imperative is! It should have been 'Please always keep the door close."
Teacher D: " There's nothing wrong with the word 'closed'."
Teacher C: "But the word 'closed' is a past tense word!"
Teacher D: "It is not a past tense word. It's an adjective."
Teacher C: "Whatever!"
Two hours later.
Teacher E: " Who crossed out the word 'closed' and wrote the word 'close' on top of it?"
Teacher F: "I don't know."
Teacher E: "The sentence would have sounded better as 'Please keep door closed."
Teacher F: "No, you are wrong. The word 'Please' should be struck out.It is a redundancy."
Teacher E: "Why is it a redundancy?"
Teacher F(in an owlish tone): " The word 'please' means the same as the word 'keep'. "
Teacher E(scratching his head in uncertainty): "I see..."
Teacher F: " I can't bear to see such a badly-written sign. It's disgusting!"
With that, Teacher F tore off the sign and walked towards the office of the senior curriculum assistant.The thump of her high heels reverberated through the room.

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