Username
Skeeter Lewis
Member Since
March 16, 2012
Total number of comments
165
Total number of votes received
210
Bio
Latest Comments
Meaningless Use of “key”
- June 4, 2014, 2:57am
Yes, there's a coterie in the media that gets over-excited by new usages. For example, in the past a writer might say, "Anne was only eighteen." Now, it has to be, "Anne was just eighteen." To me, that means she's had her birthday recently.
Use of multiple periods
- June 4, 2014, 2:49am
Dots should be used sparingly. When I turn a page and see a swarm of dots, my heart sinks. It looks like amateur day.
Meaningless Use of “key”
- June 3, 2014, 3:06pm
Key is a buzzword that irritates me too. Much over-used.
fewer / less
- June 3, 2014, 2:55pm
Thanks, Will. I think it's another instance of Brits misunderstanding American idiom and getting it bass-ackward.
Skeet
“up on top” vs. “up top”
- May 27, 2014, 4:01pm
As a Brit, I'd just say, "on top".
“Between you and I...”
- May 27, 2014, 4:00pm
I think the term for this nowadays is 'hypercorrection'.
fewer / less
- May 27, 2014, 7:40am
I notice Tesco using the line, 'Better than half price'. 'Better than' in this sense is an Americanism that (I think) always means 'more than' not 'less than'.
Perhaps Americans will chime in and tell us if I'm talking rubbish or Tesco is.
Fora vs Forums
- May 24, 2014, 10:58am
In general, clearly, foreign singulars and plurals are retained when a word is newly introduced but in time the word is naturalized. Remember, vast swathes of English are foreign words that have been gradually absorbed into the mother tongue.
Fora vs Forums
- May 24, 2014, 10:52am
I'm sorry to hear criteria being used in the singular instead of criterion.
Similarly, 'phenomenon',
Skeet
Questions
Medicine or Medication? | October 27, 2012 |
What’s happening to the Passive? | July 30, 2014 |
The 1900s | June 11, 2015 |
why does english have capital letters?
It's spelled 'minuscule'. With a U.