Username
Skeeter Lewis
Member Since
March 16, 2012
Total number of comments
165
Total number of votes received
210
Bio
Latest Comments
“As per ....”?
- June 24, 2014, 2:49am
An edit button, pretty please?
“As per ....”?
- June 24, 2014, 2:40am
Bugger.
'I've only ever seen that in Detroit' suggests that I may have heard it...but never seen it.
“As per ....”?
- June 24, 2014, 2:38am
Has the 'only' drifted into the wrong place?
I've only ever seen that in Detroit.
I've seen that only in Detroit. (Ever being dropped)
'I've only ever seen that in Detroit' suggests that I may have seen it...but never heard it.
“As per ....”?
- June 24, 2014, 2:11am
In English English slang a chrome dome is a baldy.
Using country name as an adjective?
- June 23, 2014, 3:08am
My generation still calls it The Ivory Coast but 'the' has been dropped.
fewer / less
- June 20, 2014, 3:50am
Will - thanks for your post. I think that the sort of people who write advertising copy are aware of American slang and tend to pick it up. They just don't get it right.
Is Punctuation Part of “Mechanics”?
- June 16, 2014, 4:24am
To me, as a Brit, mechanics has nothing to do with the study of English.
that vs. if and whether
- June 13, 2014, 4:38am
Thanks, jayles. Economy, ecology and ecumenical are all derived from it. The English spellings (oeconomy, oecology and oecumenical) have finally given way to the simpler form, just as the 'ae' in, for example, mediaeval, has been shortened to plain 'e'.
In Britain we keep the spelling 'aesthete', pronounced with a long 'e'. Americans spell it 'esthete' and give it a short 'e'. As with 'Edipus', that sounds odd to me.
that vs. if and whether
- June 12, 2014, 4:16pm
Economy, if memory serves, was originally spelled 'oeconomy' and would therefore have had (still does) a long O.
Americans tend to pronounce Oedipus, which they spell Edipus, with a short O, which sounds odd to me.
Questions
Medicine or Medication? | October 27, 2012 |
What’s happening to the Passive? | July 30, 2014 |
The 1900s | June 11, 2015 |
Are proverbs dying?
Jayles - what an interesting observation. It's true: one doesn't hear them so much nowadays.
Perhaps those ready-made thoughts seem rather laboured and groan-worthy.