Feb 20, 2004 06:57
20 yrs ago
English term

The shower was practically take care of itself

Non-PRO English Art/Literary
She is organising the bridal shower party for her sister:

I spent the evening trying to find a Martha recipe for quiche lorraine (there was one, naturally). Then I made a shopping list for the shower in my beautiful notebook. I placed an order for flowers from the chichi-est but most cost-effective florist I could find. (The arrangements would be cream and lavender, of course) The shower was practically take care of itself, so I decided I'd earned an evening off.

Responses

+1
1 hr
Selected

*was practically taking* care of itself

OK, "was take care" is definitely incorrect grammar.

IMO it should obviously be "was taking care of itself".
Very typical past continuous formulation. See e.g. http://www.englishpage.com/verbpage/pastcontinuous.html

It appeared, for the most part, to be taking care of itself, i.e. everything was running smoothly, falling into place. There is still more work to do though, otherwise she would be able to take more than just a night off. That is why past perfect continuous, i.e. "it had taken care of itself" is incorrect.
Peer comment(s):

agree Alarch Gwyn
1 hr
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+2
3 mins

It was taken care of

Done deal, no worries about it.
Peer comment(s):

agree J. Leo (X)
6 mins
agree Michele Johnson : It was practically taking care of itself.
56 mins
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+6
7 mins

Does not make much sense

... grammatically or otherwise.

Grammatically, one would say:

"the shower was practically taken care of" (meaning all the arrangements have been made); or

"the shower has practically taken care of itself" (usually said about an affair where the pieces fall together naturally without much intervention).

In this case, she has already described all the arrangements that she has made, so it does not make sense to say that the shower has taken care of itself.
Peer comment(s):

agree Alaa Zeineldine : It's a typo, and you're right too.
11 mins
agree Jörgen Slet
14 mins
neutral Alex Zelkind (X) : It is not a typo. People actually speak like that
22 mins
I never said there was a typo. The error may or may not be a typo, but it is an error, whether "people" talke tlike this or not. And, as I explained, there are actually two errors, not one: one grammatical, the other logical.
agree Jeannie Graham : Ungrammatical and agree with Fuad's possible interpretations too.
1 hr
agree Armorel Young
1 hr
agree James Calder : Yes, I don't see how a shower can take care of itself. Must be a typo.
3 hrs
agree senin
9 hrs
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10 mins

it *has* taken care of itself

This is probably just a typo. All the shower preparations came nicely together and were completed without her intervention.

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Note added at 18 mins (2004-02-20 07:15:25 GMT)
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Misused idiom:

Now that I saw Fuad\'s comment I think it makes sense (his comment that is). If she has done all the work, then the shower did not take care of itself. She was happy that it was all done and felt compelled to be idiomatic. The result was a little tacky.
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42 mins

I've almost finished my preparation for the shower for today

...
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3 hrs

The shower was taken care of

I had arranged everything for the shower, soap, gel, shampoo towels, the works. So I did not have to worry about it.

Sonia
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4 hrs

would

Just a comment.

I think the writer meant "would" instead of "was, has, etc....."

Having made all the arrangements and with nothing left to do)....."the shower would practically take care of itself", so I decided I'd earned an evening off.
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