merriam-webster.com lists golf as both a noun and an intransitive verb so I think people are okay saying I'm golfing today.You have it in quotes. Who said that? It makes no sense.
A better comparison is, you don't go golfing, just like you don't go pooling. Or you don't 'golf' and you don't 'pool.'
Both 'golf' and 'pool' are nouns. You play golf and you play pool.
merriam-webster.com lists golf as both a noun and an intransitive verb so I think people are okay saying I'm golfing today.
Pooling today, not so much.
Webster can be wrong, and it is in this case. What makes you think the person who included that into Webster actually plays golf or is an expert in English? Have you seen how journalists write these days? They have very little understanding of the English language. The bar keeps getting lowered --- SMH --- Golf is a noun. It's not suddenly a verb just because Webster is giving credibility to incorrect use of the English language.merriam-webster.com lists golf as both a noun and an intransitive verb so I think people are okay saying I'm golfing today.
Pooling today, not so much.
Webster can be wrong, and it is in this case. What makes you think the person who included that into Webster actually plays golf or is an expert in English? Have you seen how journalists write these days? They have very little understanding of the English language. The bar keeps getting lowered --- SMH --- Golf is a noun. It's not suddenly a verb just because Webster is giving credibility to incorrect use of the English language.
Stick to Strunk and White's Elements of Style if you want to understand the proper use of English grammar.
Well language evolves and what was incorrect, if it becomes common usage, then becomes “correct”. We ain’t exactly speakin’ the Queen’s English no more. Seriously though, I hate the degradation that we see lately because it indicates and fosters sloppy thinking which has consequences.
If "shoot' is good enough for Robert Rosen, it's good enough for me!You have it in quotes. Who said that? It makes no sense.
A better comparison is, you don't go golfing, just like you don't go pooling. Or you don't 'golf' and you don't 'pool.'
Both 'golf' and 'pool' are nouns. You play golf and you play pool.
Only the players that get super frustrated, STOKE a cue... usually in a bar b que pit...most swing a golf club like they stoke a cue, No feel or finesse just man handling it.
The saying in whatever form is about people who are so wrapped up in the mechanics of the swing that they can't play the game. Now the question really is does this exist in the billiards world?
So you're saying if it's old it's correct? LOL. Feel free to go golfing. I will continue to play golf.Golf has been a verb for decades. It has been more normal to say, 'Let's golf', or, 'My worthless girlfriend spends more time golfing than taking care of her illegitimate kids' than to say, 'Let's play golf'. This is decades old, so if that particular bar was lowered, it was well before the whipper-snappers, and maybe before the fogeys.
Just a check, the earliest use of 'golf' as a verb was in the 1800's, according to OED. Strunk wasn't published until 1920.