Username
dave
Member Since
December 27, 2004
Total number of comments
14
Total number of votes received
35
Bio
Latest Comments
“for long”
- August 29, 2011, 8:11am
Very curious. I see what you mean. I was about to say it's not *strictly* true; for example, you can ask "Will you be long?" or "Will you be there for long?" But on reflection, "long" is still a negative in both questions, almost as if "long" really means "too long."
So yeah, interesting observation. But I have no clue as to the answer. :p
possession with an entity which uses parenthesis
- April 5, 2005, 10:59am
Yeah, you're spot on about the ambiguity of my rendering. "Officials of Bobby Thompson (Rutter)" it is.
you all
- April 5, 2005, 10:55am
"Hey, everyone," would be common. Whether the singular-plural distinction always requires separate grammatical forms in this context is debatable. There are all kinds of ways we communicate these distinctions, e.g. body language, eye contact etc.
Questions
Film titles | November 20, 2004 |
American versus British question | April 17, 2005 |
This construction is puzzling me... | April 21, 2005 |
S.P.E.C.S. | May 4, 2005 |
eg, e.g., or eg.
Either is fine: "eg" or "e.g." Periods in abbreviations that are so readily understood are becoming obsolete, or at least optional.
I don't see "eg." much, with just one period, and if I did, I'd probably assume it was a typo or error.