Saturday, June 9, 2007

LAZY SATURDAY

Since the sun is shining and since I am inherently lazy, I will not publish the corrections and explanations until tomorrow.

Have a great one! Have two, if you are so inclined.

M

Friday, June 8, 2007

MORE MEDIA CONTRIBUTIONS

THANK YOU: CELEBRITY CONTRIBUTORS

"That's a favourite of Diane Chamberlain's."
Shelley Solmes, CBC Radio "Here's to You", Thursday, June 7, 2007, 10:50 am.


"There are a number of fundraising events planned."
Anna Vlachos, Windsor A Channel News, Thursday, June 7, 2007, 6:11 pm.


TODAY'S WORD


The word for today is "frenetic".
Define the word and use it in a sentence.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

WHEN WILL IT EVER END?

ANOTHER PROFESSIONAL EFFORT

"Less bird watchers means big dip in local tourist dollars."
Gary Rennie, sub-heading, The Windsor Star, Thursday, June 7, 2007, p. C11.
(Observation: who, really, is the big dip?)

TODAY'S WORD

The word for today is "licentious".
Define the word and use it in a sentence.

DEAR ANONYMOUS

Your effort at correcting "I kid you not!" was in vain. There was nothing wrong with that one.

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

A COUPLE OF GEMS

THESE ARE REAL
I kid you not!

"Have you made up your mind who to vote for?"
A Channel News graphic, Tuesday, June 5, 2007, 6:12 pm.

"I shoulda took that book back to the library yesterday."
An anonymous acquaintance.

TODAY'S WORD

The word for today is "ignoramus".
Define the word. Use it in a sentence.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

THEM THERE THINGS THERE!

AN INVITATION

Do you have a pet peeve? Does some phrase or common word misuse really irk you? Do you have an example of a terrible punctuation error?
Let me know your favourite gaff by sending a comment and I will print it if it fits the mandate.


CORRECT?

"I like them peaches".

What is the error? Is there more than one error? Why? Fix it (them).

TODAY'S WORD

The word for today is cacophony.

Monday, June 4, 2007

WORD BASICS - PART 5

ALREADY/ALL READY

What is the difference between "already" and "all ready"?
Use each in a sentence such that the meanings are clearly understandable.

TODAY'S WORD

The word for today is "excoriate".
Define the word and use it in a sentence.

REVIEW COMING

I am preparing a list of all words I have included in this blog. The intent is to encourage the use of varied and vivid language.

Sunday, June 3, 2007

CORRECTIONS & EXPLANATIONS - June 3, 2007

Here are the explanations of the various errors and examples posted last week.

"The store also held a barbecue in their parking lot Thursday that raised more than $1,900 for the baby, $400 of which was donated."
"The store also held a barbecue in its parking lot Thursday that raised more than $1,900 for the baby, $400 of which was donated."
Sense question: if they raised more than $1,900 and only $400 was donated, how did they obtain the $1,500 difference? This is a very poorly constructed thought.

"The survey also shows that nearly one in five Canadian parents believe that if their children have taken swimming lessons, fences and gates around home pools are not needed."
"The survey also shows that nearly one in five Canadian parents believes that if his children have taken swimming lessons, fences and gates around home pools are not needed."
The author must learn subject-verb agreements.

PROPHESY/PROPHECY

“Prophesy” is a verb meaning to foretell or predict and the emphasis is on the last syllable.
“Prophecy” is a noun meaning foretelling and the emphasis is on the first syllable.
Other forms of the words are prophet (n.) and prophetic (adj.).
The old prophets prophesy that the world will someday turn to jelly. The people do not believe their prophecy.

RISE/RAISE
“Rise” is an intransitive verb meaning to get up or elevate. It never takes an object.
“Raise” is a transitive verb meaning to cause to grow or to elevate. It normally is done to something and thus takes an object.
A transitive verb is one that takes an object.
An intransitive verb never takes an object.
The boy continually raised his hand in class. He was very polite and would always rise when he spoke.

NEWSCASTER GAFFS

"Schwartzenegger is here to sell Canadians on his highly unique environmental agenda."
"Schwartzenegger is here to sell Canadians on his unique environmental agenda."
Unique means one of a kind. It cannot be raised, lowered or altered by a modifier.

"A pair of wayward whales are almost back home."
"A pair of wayward whales is almost back home."
“Pair” is a collective, singular noun and must have a singular verb.

DISINTERESTED/UNINTERESTED

What is the difference between "disinterested" and "uninterested"?
“Disinterested” mean impartial or taking no side.
“Uninterested” means not being concerned or caring about something.
A good arbiter is disinterested and has no favourites.
The child became uninterested in the boring game very quickly.

GENDER/SEX

"Gender" refers to the classification of nouns in various languages usually as masculine, feminine or neuter. It has nothing to do with human sexuality.
"Sex" designates one’s maleness or femaleness. It should not be confused with gender.
Boys are of the male sex and girls are of the female sex but when they meet they should never confuse what they want with the concept of gender because they will get all mixed up. (I couldn’t resist that.)

THE WORDS

“Taciturn" (adj.) means inclined to silence or not inclined to conversation.
The taciturn old man would rather play bridge than chat with his friends.

“Promulgate” (v.) means to make known, to proclaim formally or to set forth.
The workers tried to promulgate their leader’s message to the voters.

“Dilettante” (n.) means a dabbler, pretender or one who pursues an art merely for amusement.
The self-absorbed actor was considered an emotive ham by his more professional peers.

“Exigency” (n.) means a need , demand or requirement needing quick action.
The exigencies of the war are always in the forefront of our thoughts.

“Glib" (adj.) means ready and fluent, often insincerely or thoughtlessly.
The politician was always superbly dressed and always had a glib observation about his opponents.