Username
bubbha
Member Since
December 24, 2011
Total number of comments
110
Total number of votes received
519
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Latest Comments
“further” vs. “farther”
- August 4, 2013, 1:34am
Oops... how do you edit a comment? Should be "farther", not "father".
“further” vs. “farther”
- August 4, 2013, 1:33am
I learned that "father" is used with physical distances, while "further" is used elsewhere:
"He drove even farther into Canada today."
"Further research was necessary."
Same difference
- August 4, 2013, 1:29am
It's just an expression; nothing to fret about. In fact, it has a bit of a humorous feel because the expression is somewhat absurd under analysis. Like "Same old same old."
When “that” is necessary
- August 4, 2013, 1:27am
In this sense (as a "complementizer"), "that" is optional. Using it can make more complex sentences clearer. It can also help make a sentence more formal.
“reach out”
- August 4, 2013, 1:24am
The phrase was certainly given impetus by the old AT&T ad campaign: "Reach out and touch someone."
You’ve got another think/thing coming
- October 2, 2012, 6:27pm
The logic of "You got another thing coming" is clear in its meaning: something else (unexpected or unwanted) is on its way.
You’ve got another think/thing coming
- October 1, 2012, 8:11am
The phrase "If that’s what you think, you’ve got another think coming" is a play on words that incorporates the older term "You've got another thing coming," changing "thing" to "think" for humorous and meaningful effect.
“and” or “but” followed by a comma
- August 7, 2012, 1:09am
Yes, it bothers me big time. The logical structure of the sentence has a strong natural break before the conjunction. It's certainly a stronger break than what comes after the conjunction. If a comma is place after a conjunction, ideally there should be a semicolon before it.
My biggest peeve is when a comma is placed after "therefore", but not before.
Example: "I completed the project before the deadline and therefore, I started working on another one." Uggghhh!
Latest vs. Newest
- August 1, 2012, 2:18am
The term "the late" meaning "the recently deceased" can't be given the "-est" ending, so "the latest" can't possibly have any connotation of death.
Correct use the adjective “key”
That word processor is Microsoft Word, I bet. I get the same thing: I type in something like "The new strategy he had proposed was key to the success of the project" and Word flags "key" as being wrong. It's a flaw in the word processor, because the usage of "key" is correct here.