There is a great chasm on these phrases in the US. The great divide seems to be currently centered at the age of 40. The younger generation has began shifting to "on accident" for unknown reasons. What is your view?
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20I suspect "on accident" has come into prominence by analogy with (and by being frequently used in opposition to) "on purpose".– ShreevatsaRCommented Aug 6, 2010 at 16:26
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I found this which is a pretty interesting read and discussion of theories with the comments.– eruditassCommented Aug 6, 2010 at 17:02
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It could also possibly have come from "an accident." I know I said that a lot when I was little. It could have morphed into "on accident" pretty easily. Just kind of occurred to me a little while ago. Might as well share.– kitukwfyerCommented Aug 7, 2010 at 23:22
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2Curious, my kids say "on accident", and I always thought they were just plain wrong, but it turns out the problem is really that I am simply not hip enough? Well, I guess old age comes to us all.– Fraser OrrCommented May 27, 2011 at 18:43
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4Instead of "by accident"?! It's "accidentally"! I'm 19, there is hardly an an excuse for this reckless abuse. I can only hope you said that on accident.– OJFordCommented Feb 23, 2014 at 1:20
9 Answers
"On accident" (meaning "accidentally") does seem to be an unusual usage that frequently appears in opposition to the much more idiomatic "on purpose" (meaning "purposefully"). These are the kinds of idioms commonly used by e.g. children in explaining why something has gone wrong:
—"You broke my toy on purpose!"
—"No, it was on accident!".
A quick survey of the 34 incidences of "on accident" in the Corpus of Contemporary American English show about half have the sense discussed here, and "on accident" does occur in opposition to "on purpose":
HAAS: That happens in so many cases where you're got misinformation that's either leaked on accident or on purpose.
— from "Gunman Kills 32, Wounds 28 at Virginia Tech" on On the Record w/ Greta Van Susteren on Fox News, 2007
> JACOBUS: Big difference when it's on purpose and when it's on accident.
> — from "Dean, Democrats and Iowa's Deadline", on CNN, 2003
Other examples are from fiction:
"Dad better not see this or you'll get it. I'll tell him we were play fighting, and I slugged you on accident."
— Evan Shopper, "If I have to hit one of you, I'll hit you both" in The Massachusetts Review, 2003
> She was thirteen years old, called herself a "gangsta ho" even though all her friends were white, and had already dropped out of school. "On accident," she said - she'd broken her collarbone the year before horsing around on her cousin's dirt bike and missed so much school that she simply never bothered returning.
> — Emily Shelton, "From MEMPHIS (Short story)." in *Chicago Review*, 2003
"By accident", in contrast, has 1419 results, making it more than 100 times more common, and occurring not just in spoken and informal written English, but also in formal edited writing in academic journals, magazines, and newspapers.
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9Just to add some international colour, 'on accident' is not considered proper English in the UK, and seems to be a US variant.– Phil HCommented Jan 29, 2014 at 8:23
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2In my search for some kind of rationale behind this I discovered reference to a study which shows it's age-dependant, at least in the US. I agree outside the US it is simply considered 'wrong' - quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/…– TetsujinCommented Oct 14, 2017 at 9:49
"On accident" sounds strange to me. "By accident" sounds better, but I can't understand how it could be much different from "On purpose", albeit very strange to say "By purpose".
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I think you're onto something there; it probably originated as the counterpart to "on purpose".– njdCommented Aug 6, 2010 at 16:31
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1That is one popular theory, but there is a lack of trigger evidence for such an abrupt surge in parallelism-seeking. Commented Aug 6, 2010 at 17:03
A quick Google search of "fell by accident" versus "fell on accident" suggests that "by accident" is used about 99% of the time.
But with "tripped by/on accident" there are more results for "on".
I've never encountered "on accident" until seeing this question, so I think it must be something peculiar to the US.
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1Yeah, I've never encountered "on accident" either, despite living in the US for 3 years. Commented Aug 6, 2010 at 16:32
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2I've lived in the US my whole life, and I've heard "on accident" before, but only rarely. Commented Aug 6, 2010 at 18:21
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3I'm originally from the eastern mid-west (Ohio) and grew up on the mid-Atlantic (Maryland, primarily). I had never heard "on accident" before I moved to Wisconsin in the early '90s, but it's quite common here.– coriCommented Aug 7, 2010 at 17:12
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1Why Google search might produce results, Google ngrams produces 0 results for "tripped on accident". Commented Sep 4, 2020 at 16:17
He tripped on accident.
He was eaten by accident.
Those are the forms I would use, if forced to choose between them. However, there is no grammatical difference between the two1, and I chose those because they "sound right". I don't believe there is actually a rule which states which to use, but I could be wrong about that.
This matter, of course, is solved if we use the word accidentally
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1 Yes, the second sentence is in passive voice, while the first is in active, but I don't think that's the root cause.
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1Actually, you may be onto something with the whole passive voice thing.– ChrisCommented Aug 6, 2010 at 16:36
As the original question makes pretty clear, this is a change in progress (you see this kind of stratification by age all the time with changes in progress). In the earlier stages of such a change, you can't expect to find it much in writing, so results from google, etc, are going to be misleading. It's likely there is also regional variation here as well. To me "on accident" (raised in northern California) is normal, though sounds slightly less formal.
As for why this might be happening, I like ShreevatsaR's theory.
In situations like these, I tend to lengthen out the phrase.
Replace "by" with "by way of a/an"
He tripped by way of an accident.
accident here adds information to the clause "he tripped"
"Purpose" is something thought out, perhaps written down, requiring more formal thought.
A synonym for "purpose" is "intent". He tripped by intent sounds better than "He tripped on intent". Therefore, I would guess that although we are more comfortable with "tripping 'on' purpose" I wonder if "tripping by purpose" is actually a more accurate phrase. In addition, "He tripped on..." could be followed by an object as well. "He tripped on a cat"
Sorry for the rambling.
Both sound reasonable to my ear, though I like "by accident" better. Doing some basic corpus analysis finds that "by accident" is much more prevelant. The Corpus of Contemporary American English lists 1419 occurrences of "by accident" vs only 23 for "on accident". A quick Google comparison gives 7,030,000 hits for "by accident" vs 1,020,000 hits for "on accident". Interesting to be sure.
Perhaps this is in reference to Barratt's paper on the topic, and language change in general. Changes like this do happen, and it isn't unusual for usage to be clearly defined by generations (consider the verb impact). One conclusion drawn here is that people are seeking parallelism with "on purpose", though it also concedes that it's hard to know for sure.
I have some friends in the south (Louisisana) who always say "on accident" and think "by accident" sounds wrong.
My friends in the North (New Jersey/Pennsylvania) think "on accident" sounds wrong.
It may be a regional thing, but I don't have enough data to say for sure.
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Not a trace of doubt in my mind that 'on accident' is WRONG, 'by accident' is correct, non-negotiable.
The writer must think about the true meaning of his words, and bad grammar is often indicative of inexperience, if not partial illiteracy. It is not possible to 'do' something 'on accident'. An accident is, by definition, something not intended, or the unintended result of something done deliberately.
And I am purposefully writing. It is no accident that I am writing. I am doing this on purpose.
One cannot trip on intent (unless it is lying in the street and you fail to step over it). You can do something WITH intent, or can do it deliberately, or do it intentionally. These three notionally synonymous phrases each have different subtleties of meaning.
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What is a peeve? Not a noun in my dictionary. And I am not peeved at your comment, but amused at your unwillingness to learn. Try 'Fowler' for an authoritative answer. Commented Apr 24, 2013 at 13:28
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6We don’t care about your opinion or prejudices. We expect our answers to be backed up with references to scholarly works.– tchrist ♦Commented Apr 24, 2013 at 13:30
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3FWIW, Merriam-Webster does define "peeve" as a noun: 1: a feeling or mood of resentment; 2: a particular grievance or source of aggravation (merriam-webster.com/dictionary/peeve)– nohatCommented Jan 19, 2017 at 2:46