ATTN: Copyeditors and Grammar Fiends

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Cos that's its name, right? Our moon happens to be called Moon, no?

Zoe Espera, Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:03 (seventeen years ago)

Where I work, it's "the Moon" when referring to it as an astral object ("The Moon is thousands of miles from Earth") and "the moon" in more poetic or metaphorical usages ("man in the moon," "reach for the moon").

Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:10 (seventeen years ago)

Also, there seems to be a trend toward deleting the "the" before "Earth," as I have just done, since it's just one planet among eight, but no one seems to be suggesting that the same be done for "Moon."

Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:13 (seventeen years ago)

Actually, I have seen "the" dropped from Moon quite a bit.

Surfjan Stevens (libcrypt), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:29 (seventeen years ago)

it's "the moon" for the same reason it's "my mom" vs "Mom" or "the sun" vs "Sol" etc

k3vin k., Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:30 (seventeen years ago)

I like the sound of Man on Moon. But that is not a good guide for usage.

Alba, Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:32 (seventeen years ago)

merriam-webster says both "often capitalized" and "usually used with 'the,'" which i dont really agree w/

k3vin k., Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:33 (seventeen years ago)

of course, saying "often" is essentially read as "ask someone else"

k3vin k., Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:34 (seventeen years ago)

"Internet" vs. "internet" also y'alls.

Surfjan Stevens (libcrypt), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:35 (seventeen years ago)

Maybe "the" should be dropped from "the Internet".

I will look for this tasty recipe on Internet.

Surfjan Stevens (libcrypt), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:35 (seventeen years ago)

iirc AP says "Internet" and "E-mail" which i think is ridiculous

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:36 (seventeen years ago)

That's, "the E-mail".

Surfjan Stevens (libcrypt), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:37 (seventeen years ago)

Anyways it's all just "mail" now thanks to the wondrous technology of backronyms and "snail" or "postal" mail.

Surfjan Stevens (libcrypt), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:38 (seventeen years ago)

pleas no hyphen in email

Safe Boating is No Accident (G00blar), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:46 (seventeen years ago)

and no e in please doh

Safe Boating is No Accident (G00blar), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:46 (seventeen years ago)

plas

7Crutis (libcrypt), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:46 (seventeen years ago)

oh, AP also says "Web site"

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:47 (seventeen years ago)

my bad, AP doesn't capitalize email, but it does add the dash

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:48 (seventeen years ago)

I get into this conversation fairly often, but "Internet" and "e-mail" are so standardized to me that it's impossible for me to imagine them any other way. On the other hand, "Web site" has always looked silly.

Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Wednesday, 28 January 2009 17:56 (seventeen years ago)

We go with the Internet, but email and website.

But anyway, we have started extracting stuff from the reports we doand putting them into PowerPoint, which we then have to sub (a bit).

But it drives me mad!

For example, how can I do a non-breaking hyphen, an optional hyphen, a non-breaking space? Help!

Jamie T Smith, Thursday, 29 January 2009 11:55 (seventeen years ago)

In PowerPoint? I don't imagine you can, to be brutally frank.

Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Thursday, 29 January 2009 11:58 (seventeen years ago)

Has no-one ever wanted to do a line break in a presentation? Or not split Mr and Smith?

Gah!

"business-friendly formats"

Jamie T Smith, Thursday, 29 January 2009 12:01 (seventeen years ago)

Non-breaking space: don't have PPt here, but try alt+0160 (on numpad).

Non-breaking space: similarly, try alt+0173.

Optional hyphen: I wouldn't be surprised if it isn't possible, that sounds like word-processing type funcionality.

anatol_merklich, Thursday, 29 January 2009 12:55 (seventeen years ago)

I was riding the train to work, and across the aisle, I saw a woman with a cardboard box perched on top of her backpack. The boxstarted to slide off, but she hesitated before catching it -- so I must've saw it fall before she did. Or must I have seen it fall before she did?

Leee, Saturday, 31 January 2009 04:56 (seventeen years ago)

seen

k3vin k., Saturday, 31 January 2009 05:07 (seventeen years ago)

wait what

"I must have seen it"

k3vin k., Saturday, 31 January 2009 05:07 (seventeen years ago)

Seen would imply past imperfect though, and this was a one time thing?

Leee, Saturday, 31 January 2009 05:09 (seventeen years ago)

NEVER use "have saw"

Joe Bob 1 Tooth (Hurting 2), Saturday, 31 January 2009 05:13 (seventeen years ago)

seen is past participle

k3vin k., Saturday, 31 January 2009 05:17 (seventeen years ago)

Have saw will travel. I don't know what's wrong with my grammar nowadays. ;-:

Leee, Saturday, 31 January 2009 05:40 (seventeen years ago)

'...must have saw it...' is always wrong. If the thing troubling you is that the box didn't actually fall all the way to the ground before the woman caught it, then you could change it to "I must have seen (or noticed) it falling (or start to fall) before she did"

Teh Movable Object (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Saturday, 31 January 2009 07:17 (seventeen years ago)

'have saw' seems to be exclusively an American colloquialism. It is very very very very very very very very wrong, whether American or otherwise.

Donate your display name to Gaza (Autumn Almanac), Saturday, 31 January 2009 22:51 (seventeen years ago)

Have saw. Will travel.

muomus (libcrypt), Saturday, 31 January 2009 23:06 (seventeen years ago)

oh d'oh

muomus (libcrypt), Saturday, 31 January 2009 23:06 (seventeen years ago)

'have saw' seems to be exclusively an American colloquialism.

No, I think Leeee was just overthinking this. I've never heard anyone say it.

Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Saturday, 31 January 2009 23:53 (seventeen years ago)

Ok... one I was picked up on by a fellow grammar fiend (Grammar Fiend?) a few years ago. And was ashamed never to have thought about.

"I am ..." (doing something etc.)

Does the opposite construction exist?
"I amn't..."

If so, why do we say "I aren't...", when we wouldn't say "I are...".
If this is subjunctive skullduggery, please use words of one syllable.

AndyTheScot, Monday, 2 February 2009 00:26 (seventeen years ago)

Do people say "I aren't..." though? I don't think I do. You would say "I'm not", rather than "I amn't" though, surely.

ailsa, Monday, 2 February 2009 00:33 (seventeen years ago)

no one in the history of the world has ever said "i aren't"

k3vin k., Monday, 2 February 2009 00:42 (seventeen years ago)

Only pirates say "I aren't."

Leee, Monday, 2 February 2009 03:27 (seventeen years ago)

Does the opposite construction exist?

Yes. "I'm not."

Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Monday, 2 February 2009 08:11 (seventeen years ago)

In fairness, though: turn the construction round and we do accept the grammatical anomaly, viz:

"It's snowing today so we're going to build a snowman, aren't we?" (fine)

"It's snowing today so I'm going to build a snowman, aren't I?" (certain dialects would say "amn't I" -- I had a girlfriend from the north-east of Scotland who did this -- but who would say "am I not", and who would bother to correct "aren't I"?)

Special topics: Disco, The Common Market (grimly fiendish), Monday, 2 February 2009 08:17 (seventeen years ago)

"'have saw' seems to be exclusively an American colloquialism."
"No, I think Leeee was just overthinking this. I've never heard anyone say it."

I've heard "have drank" a lot, possibly more from Americans but also over here, so would not be surprised if other verbs with different simple past tense and past participle were also losing one or the other. Will it always be the participle?

Then again that is probably one of those things that people have been saying for centuries, and I suspect I wouldn't have to look too hard through the working classes of Victorian novels to find some examples there too.

(Apologies to true grammar fiends if I have the wrong terms in this post)

a passing spacecadet, Monday, 2 February 2009 09:16 (seventeen years ago)

My powerpoint query:

Non-breaking space: don't have PPt here, but try alt+0160 (on numpad).

Non-breaking space: similarly, try alt+0173.

For some reason this didn't work using alt, but if you go to insert>symbol and put them in the box and select ASCII (decimal) it works fine.

Thanks

Jamie T Smith, Monday, 2 February 2009 14:22 (seventeen years ago)

Today's Times Online - God alone knows whether it was in the paper proper -

Victim waves anonymity after rape at hands of racehorse owner

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article5677546.ece

holy moley.

Abbe Black Tentacle (GamalielRatsey), Friday, 6 February 2009 19:43 (seventeen years ago)

victim waves goodbye to anonymity

Eyeball Kicks, Friday, 6 February 2009 20:50 (seventeen years ago)

throw anonymity in the air
and wave it like you you just don't care

nosotros niggamos (HI DERE), Friday, 6 February 2009 20:52 (seventeen years ago)

omg the picture of the week: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00482/POTW_06_02_09_05_482219d.jpg

nosotros niggamos (HI DERE), Friday, 6 February 2009 20:53 (seventeen years ago)

lol trying to think of a humorous circumstance under which that sentence would make sense but no, it's just rong

jammed hymen (k3vin k.), Friday, 6 February 2009 21:01 (seventeen years ago)

The first delivery on board a new generation Q-Flex tanker, with a capacity of 211,885 cu metres of LNG, is currently on route to the South Hook terminal in Wales.

So, initially I was just going to change it to en route, but can you actually use that expression like that? ie prepositionally? Dictionary just lists it as an adverb.

Easy to change the sentence to "on the way", but out of interest ...

Jamie T Smith, Thursday, 12 February 2009 14:59 (seventeen years ago)

"I admired the mountain, from which five corries have been ripped out of its east-facing slopes."

This construction seems wrong to me. The "its" is where it jars. I've come across this problem before, but am not very articulate when it comes to syntax. Am I right to think there's something wrong?

Alba, Thursday, 19 February 2009 18:01 (seventeen years ago)


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