By Stephen Schulman on Tuesday, 11 August 2020
Category: September 2020

Push the Tomato into the Bull!

For many years, I served as a senior examiner for the national English matriculation examinations. The work is tedious and demanding: you sit for a daily concentrated eight hours or more checking and grading exam papers, whilst paying close attention to each one in order to give it the highest grade it deserves. Moreover, you have to keep a close eye out for cheating and then when suspected, spend more time laboriously (and unremunerated) filling in the appropriate forms.

The five-point examination (the highest level) included two written assignments, the length of each one limited to approximately 150 words and with the subjects being changed each year. Even so, much of the content and style was of a mind-numbing sameness with few amusing moments to alleviate the ennui. To enliven and lighten the experience, many of us examiners would collect and write down the most entertaining "bloopers" that would then be posted on the marking center notice board. Very often, the gleanings were meager but a few particular years yielded a veritable cornucopia. Here is a selection – unabridged, uncensored and completely authentic.

The instructions on how to make a pizza with the assorted spelling and grammatical mistakes plus direct translations from Hebrew and hasty improvisations provided some gems:

Two instances of vented cooking frustration leading to unwarranted violence:

Some excerpts from applications for position of a summer camp counsellor:

Self-confidence has never harmed anyone:

The speech on environmental issues in Israel, with attendant misspellings and letter omissions brought some intriguing results:

And lest we forget - native originality in approaches and solutions:

And a prime exemplar of linguistic ingenuity occurred when one of my own pupils in a class composition about the noise problem in Israel wrote: "Israeli drivers are horning in their cars."

One composition topic was: "Describe how a certain person has influenced your life."

Other assorted jewels of erudition and inventive semantics:

In the three-point (lower level) examination, the dialogue answer, "Yes, you can ask me some questions!" was preceded by the examinee's interrogative in flawless Pidgin English: "I am lave dis is a newspaper he god?"

And finally, an overseas student in the United States describing a sports event in Florida: "A special competition speedboat carries the skier at 35 miles an hour towards a six feet rump." – Now, there is a known obesity problem in America, but this is carrying things to an extreme! 

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