Username
Warsaw Will
Member Since
December 3, 2010
Total number of comments
1371
Total number of votes received
2083
Bio
I'm a TEFL teacher working in Poland. I have a blog - Random Idea English - where I do some grammar stuff for advanced students and have the occasional rant against pedantry.
Latest Comments
What is the word for intentionally incorrect spelling?
- February 21, 2014, 9:17am
@dlockner - I'm afraid wrong on both counts. A malapropism is neither intentional nor to do with spelling, but rather the unintentional use of a similar-sounding word instead of the one you meant, 'often with a comic effect' (Oxford Dictionaries Online), for example 'dance the flamingo' instead of 'dance the flamenco' (although that wouldn't actually be so bad, seeing flamenco is Spanish for flamingo).
troops vs soldiers
- February 21, 2014, 9:11am
re: cohort. This is from Oxford Dictionaries Online:
They give three meanings: the first is the one given by Skeeter Lewis.
cohort - 2.[treated as singular or plural] a group of people with a shared characteristic or a common statistical characteristic:
"a cohort of civil servants patiently drafting legislation"
"the 1940-4 birth cohort of women"
cohort - 3. often derogatory - a supporter or companion:
"young Jack arrived with three of his cohorts"
"a long-time cohort of the band"
all _____ sudden
- February 19, 2014, 8:54am
@jayles- they probably got it from the OED (1558) - I've got 'upon the sudden' from 1585. I think you're much better looking at Google Books than Google as you can narrow down the dates and miss out all the dross.
Anyway I'm putting it all into a post, and will give details when finished. One thing is clear - 'on a sudden' carried on co-existing with 'all of a sudden' during the eihgteenth century.
OK I've found the 1558 one, but you can't get in to check
all _____ sudden
- February 18, 2014, 4:31pm
Shakespeare - sudden used as a noun:
on the sudden, upon the sudden - 8 instances
on a sudden, upon a sudden - 4 instances
of a sudden - 2 instances
none with all
It looks as though the 'the' version came first.
all _____ sudden
- February 18, 2014, 2:19pm
@jayles - and from your other link (phrasefinder) - " 'All of a sudden' sounds like the kind of poetic version of 'suddenly' that would do justice to Shakespeare. In fact, that's what Shakespeare thought too, as it was he who coined the phrase. In The Taming of the Shrew, circa 1596, we find: Is it possible That love should of a sodaine take such hold?"
So Shakespeare coined the phrase? Around 1596?
"Behold of a sodaine behinde me, I heard a rusling noyse, like the winde or beating of a Dragons winges" - Hypnerotomachia, the strife of love in a dreame - Francesco Colonna, Robert Dallington - 1592 (no apostrophes in those days)
all _____ sudden
- February 18, 2014, 2:09pm
@jayles - had a far healthier life, no doubt. From your Grammarphobia link -' “All of a sudden” first appeared in 1681' - now there's a challenge for us Googlers:
"therefore all of a sudden they came with great violence unto Aaron, urging him to make them one" - Seven Godlie and Frvitfvll Sermons, 1614
"for Antichrists apostacy was not at the highest all of a sudden, but encreased by flow (slow) paces" - David Pareus, 1644
"He tells him what a disgrace it would be for him, if without order of law he should ( all of a sudden) bring so man Noblemen to the scaffold without a crime" - The History of the Houses of Douglas and Angus - David Hume, 1644
Now I can answer your question - relied on the OED to give us earliest appearances. But nowadays, if it's into the printing era, we can often beat the OED, just by looking in Google Books.
cannot vs. can not
- February 17, 2014, 5:30pm
@Emera - cannot, can not, can't are all use for both "not allowed to" and "not able to"
You cannot / can not / can't smoke in here
She cannot / can not / can't come tomorrow
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary (and Google Define) - "cannot = can not"
The main difference is that cannot is much more common than can not. The only exception is in the type of expression discussed above - 'You can NOT go if you don't want to go' - here cannot wouldn't work.- i.e. it is possible not to go.
http://www.macmillandictionary.com/dictionary/british/cannot
all _____ sudden
- February 17, 2014, 5:25am
@jayles - I should have put a smiley after 'nice try'. I didn't mean it in a negative way.
Does “Who knows” need a question mark?
- February 15, 2014, 5:13am
@Matt K - rhetorical questions are still questions:
What have the Romans ever done for us? - Life of Brian
Is the Pope a Catholic?
Smoking can lead to lung cancer. Who knew?!
All taken from Wikipedia's entry on rhetorical questions.
And that upside down question mark is for introducing questions in Spanish:
¿Cómo llegas a tan tarde? - Why are you so late?
Questions
When “one of” many things is itself plural | November 27, 2011 |
You’ve got another think/thing coming | September 29, 2012 |
Fit as a butcher’s dog | May 22, 2013 |
“reach out” | May 25, 2013 |
Tell About | October 18, 2013 |
tonne vs ton | January 25, 2014 |
apostrophe with expressions of distance or time | February 2, 2014 |
Natural as an adverb | April 13, 2014 |
fewer / less | May 3, 2014 |
Opposition to “pretty” | March 7, 2015 |
troops vs soldiers
@Skeeter Lewis - "some descriptivist dictionaries" - Could you perhaps name a dictionary that isn't descriptivist.The OED, for example, never set out to be anything else. Even the American Heritage Dictionary, which set up in opposition to the allegedly free-and-easy Webster's Third edition, is basically descriptive, with its user panels.
Incidentally, the group of soldiers meaning seems to have predated the tenth of a legion meaning (Online Etymology).
The overwhelming use of cohort today has nothing to do either with the military or with sidekicks, but with statistical analysis and social science. Out of 360 instances of cohort at the British National Corpus, 97 are 'a cohort of' (only one of which appears to have a military connection), 11 are 'age cohort', 29 'birth cohort' and 29 are 'cohort study':
http://www.just-the-word.com/show_examples.pl?triple=cohort_N+pmod+of_PREP
See also examples at the Economist:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=cohort%20site:www.economist.com
The use you don't like seems to have started in the States in the 1940s/50s, including several outings in the linguistically rather fussy New Yorker, one being by JD Salinger (who seems to have had a bit of stick for starting the fashion). The Times Literary Supplement of Nov 1965 is on your side, calling it "the new American vulgarism of 'cohort' meaning 'partner' " (from MWDEU). But it seems pretty commonplace nowadays, and in a Usage Note at the (nominally conservative) American Heritage Dictionary they say:
"Seventy-one percent of the Usage Panel accepts the sentence 'The cashiered dictator and his cohorts have all written their memoirs', while only 43 percent accepts 'The gangster walked into the room surrounded by his cohort'."
You can read about 'cohort' in the Merriam-Webster New Book of Word Histories at Google Books: http://books.google.pl/books?id=IrcZEZ1bOJsC&pg=PA114
and in The American Heritage Book of English Usage, also at Google Books:
http://books.google.pl/books?id=BEHFyMCdwssC&pg=PA81
I can't help thinking that cohort is in a class with decimated.