zaffy
Senior Member
Polish
- Aug 22, 2019
- #1
I watched a video on YT in which a guy bought a car for his poor sister. Someone wrote down in the comment section:
I’m BALLING; this was such a beautiful moment and really inspires me to work my ass off to provide for my family too. This is what it’s all about! Love it!
What does 'to ball' mean?
Loob
Senior Member
English UK
- Aug 22, 2019
- #2
It's a typo for "bawling".
zaffy
Senior Member
Polish
- Aug 22, 2019
- #3
Meaning "I'm screaming"? Does that make sense?
heypresto
Senior Member
South East England
English - England
- Aug 22, 2019
- #4
No, 'bawling' here means 'crying':
Loob
Senior Member
English UK
- Aug 22, 2019
- #5
More like "I'm crying my eyes out".
Katerina L is weeping because she has been so moved by the story.
....
Cross-posted
zaffy
Senior Member
Polish
- Aug 22, 2019
- #6
Another typo?
Miss Julie
Senior Member
Chicago metro area
English-U.S.
- Aug 22, 2019
- #7
zaffy said:
Another typo?
View attachment 32867
There are many here, I'm afraid.
Loob
Senior Member
English UK
- Aug 22, 2019
- #8
zaffy said:
Another typo?
Yes. As are you're and sisters....
________
More cross-posting!
B
Barque
Banned
Tamil
- Aug 22, 2019
- #9
Or possibly they think bawl is spelt ball.
Loob
Senior Member
English UK
- Aug 22, 2019
- #10
Barque said:
Or possibly they think bawl is spelt ball.
Yes....
zaffy
Senior Member
Polish
- Aug 22, 2019
- #11
bawl vs. ball
Just looked it up and indeed the pronunciation is the same Didn't know that verb. Learning all the time
zaffy
Senior Member
Polish
- Aug 22, 2019
- #12
And is "tear up" another synonym for crying?
Miss Julie
Senior Member
Chicago metro area
English-U.S.
- Aug 22, 2019
- #13
zaffy said:
And is "tear up" another synonym for crying?
View attachment 32868
Yes. And tear in this case rhymes with hear.
zaffy
Senior Member
Polish
- Aug 22, 2019
- #14
-Stop crying!
-Stop bawling!
-Stop tearing up!
Can I use all them in the imperative mood?
Roxxxannne
Senior Member
American English (New England and NYC)
- Aug 22, 2019
- #15
Yes, grammatically speaking, but 'tearing up' doesn't describe the same thing as 'crying.' 'Tearing up' is when your eyes fill with tears without your making the sounds that are associated with crying or weeping. You can't tell whether someone is tearing up unless you look at them.
Miss Julie
Senior Member
Chicago metro area
English-U.S.
- Aug 22, 2019
- #16
Roxxxannne said:
Yes, grammatically speaking, but 'tearing up' doesn't describe the same thing as 'crying.' 'Tearing up' is when your eyes fill with tears without your making the sounds that are associated with crying or weeping. You can't tell whether someone is tearing up unless you look at them.
Roxxxannne is right. I was in too much of a hurry with my previous post! My apologies.
DonnyB
Moderator Emeritus
Coventry, UK
English UK Southern Standard English
- Aug 22, 2019
- #17
zaffy said:
bawl vs. ball
Just looked it up and indeed the pronunciation is the sameDidn't know that verb. Learning all the time
There is actually a previous thread on the mistaken use of "balling" to mean "bawling" which you might find interesting:
balling [ bawling ] my eyes out
zaffy
Senior Member
Polish
- Aug 22, 2019
- #18
Yeah, looks like natives have indeed a problem with this word. Another typo found. What might be the reason? Is it a matter of the level of education of those people?
Miss Julie
Senior Member
Chicago metro area
English-U.S.
- Aug 22, 2019
- #19
zaffy said:
Yeah, looks like natives have indeed a problem with this word. Another typo found. What might be the reason? Is it a matter of the level of education of those people?
View attachment 32871
Perhaps, plus the confusing plethora of homophones in the English language.
kentix
Senior Member
English - U.S.
- Aug 22, 2019
- #20
Don't ever take casual chat on internet sites as a lesson in grammar and spelling. Many people don't know how to spell or write standard English well and others who do don't bother in this kind of context. Expect it to be more wrong than right.
kentix
Senior Member
English - U.S.
- Aug 22, 2019
- #21
Also be aware that balling is a slang term with a different meaning. You might see that, too.
“Ballin'” is a term often heard as slang, especially in the black community. It means to live with affluence, to have wealth. It is sometimes spelled and pronounced with a “g,” and sometimes not. It's thought to have originated from the term “having a ball.”Sep 6, 2018
Loob
Senior Member
English UK
- Aug 22, 2019
- #22
kentix said:
Don't ever take casual chat on internet sites as a lesson in grammar and spelling. Many people don't know how to spell or write standard English well and others who do don't bother in this kind of context. Expect it to be more wrong than right.
And English spelling is really quite hard, to be fair.
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