- A Nigerian lady has been trending online after publicly correcting her newlywed husband’s grammatical blunder
- Her man has posted their court wedding photos online with a caption that contained a minor grammatical error
- Reacting to this, his wife immediately quoted his tweet and responded with a correction on the main spelling of the word
A recent conversation between a newlywed Nigerian couple on X has been trailed with mixed reactions from social media users.
The wife had openly corrected her husband’s grammatical error, sparking reactions from netizens.
Photo credit: @elsavanilla, gbxgbxade/X.
Source: Twitter
Wife corrects husband’s grammatical blunder
The husband had shared photos of their court wedding with a caption that read:
“I believe I’m now qualified to set ring light and give you people marriage advise.”
Reacting to the tweet, his wife pointed out the mistake in his tweet, quoting his post and responding with a correction.

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Elsavanilla, the lady in question, playfully responded to her husband’s tweet, saying:
“It’s advice, my husband.”

Photo credit: @elsavanilla/X.
Source: Twitter
Her husband saw the correction and immediately responded with an instruction:
“Be ready to teach the kids English.”
Reactions as wife corrects husband’s blunder
Nigerians did not hesitate to react to the funny conversation between the duo.
Silver Bullet said:
“I love it!!! We never even marry this woman reach 24 hours. Brace up, my bro.”
Hitman said:
“I don’t find this funny. You shouldn’t humiliate your husband publicly like this.”
Allfather said:
“He’s correct, walk with me. He said he’ll set a ring light abi? Safe to assume that a video is in question abi? Now a recorded act of an advise (the act of giving an advice). Posted on here, is the same as giving us a video of an advise (an act of giving advice). Its like this. If he said I go give una dance, and posts a video of him dancing, he’s not wrong. If he says i go give una advise and makes a video of him advising. So technically, but only technically, he’s not wrong. Thank you.”

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Najae said:
“Advise is a verb and you can’t literally give that so advice since it’s a noun that can’t be seen.”
Ichie said:
“You aren’t to correct your husband in public. Are you sure you wouldn’t be sent back very soon? Send him a DM, osiso.”
Olart said:
“Even while joking, you shouldn’t disrespect your spouse in public. I am surprised at some behaviour some ladies exhibit. The lack of emotional intelligence is appalling!”
Son of Man said:
“You don dey correct English for marriage wey you just enter. You see why I never ready marry? Let me build my vocabulary first.”
Solix added:
“This one nah teacher teach me ooh. Hope say you allow that man breath oooh. I know say nah joke but I also know that’s how it will start. Leave English for Bristish ooh, you seems to be the Shakespeare in the Knot!!! Some corrections can generate subtle abhorence with time.”

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See the post below:
Lady displays chat with ‘grammarian’ mother
Meanwhile, Legit.ng previously reported that a Nigerian lady went viral after sharing her conversation with her mother, whom she called a grammarian.
The WhatsApp chats showed the mother correcting her wrong usage of grammar and punctuation at different times.
Source: Legit.ng