Grammar and spelling
While I do not always write grammatically correct and have the occasional spelling error or typo, it still bothers me to see it in articles and posts. The question is this: does it bother others, and if so, does it lower your opinion of the author and the subject at hand?
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Neither the people of India nor Native Americans settled in England to bring those words in.
Stormi wrote: "I think I became aware of the similarity while reading Thomas Wolfe's "Look Homeward Angel" years ago. Each word seems to express a specific emotion which no similar word would quite have expressed in the same way."
For sophisticated words (mixed with redundancy), think of using "pleonasm" to describe "tautological taxemics".
Never use a big word when exiguous terminology suffices.
Signed: Department of Redundancy Department
By the way, adverbs can modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs: directly dial, clearly good, extremely quickly.
Di-di-dit da-da-dah Di-di-dit. SOS Save Our Ship.
I assume that Seer’s “streamlining” is a call to avoid wordiness. Consider these: concise, succinct, brief, terse. Review Shakespeare’s take on the subject in Hamlet, Act II, Scene II. Polonius rambles on and on while including the brilliant nugget, “brevity is the soul of wit,” in his blather. The Queen retorts, “More matter with less art.”
Epistemological concept formation is not a “less is more” device for trimming excess verbiage. It is as expressed, a way to subsume huge quantities of referents via intellectual shorthand; integrating them by their common characteristics and differentiating them by their differences. For example, a “vehicle” integrates the concept of carrying passengers from one place to another. They are differentiated by their form and propulsion: car, bus, wagon, hovercraft.
Orwellian Newspeak is an attempt to limit concept formation and the subtlety of thought by replacing vocabulary with a primitive structure. All very bad things become double-plus ungood, losing all the shades of meaning among: dreadful, awful, terrible, horrendous, catastrophic, atrocious, ghastly, unbearable.
Note MikeMarotta’s example, “I will recommend to my wife that she call you.” Compare with, “I’ll make sure that she calls you.” Those who use good grammar may recognize both as correct, however, only the hard-core grammar nerd would express the difference as a subjunctive (or even jussive) mood vs. indicative mood. “Look up mood!” (That’s an example of imperative mood.)
I strongly recommend a course from “The Great Courses” available as either CD or DVD: The Story of Human Language by Prof. John McWhorter. It’s 36 half-hour lectures, and he is very informative, personable, and entertaining—everything you’d like in an educator. The CD version is great for daily car commuting.
Your examples of wigwam and verandah are two different “Indians.” The first word is North American Algonquian, the second has Indo-European roots from the Indian subcontinent. Veranda goes with shampoo, which is the imperative form of the Hindi champna (to press or knead).
Wigwam is closer kin to the Plains Indian teepee, as in the joke:
Doctor, I’m having recurring dreams where first I’m a teepee, then I’m a wigwam, then I’m a teepee, then I’m a wigwam. The doctor says to me, “You’re two tents!” (too tense)
(Be first on your block to use these words, amaze your friends!!!)
:-)
Remember the book: "Eats Shoots and Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation". by Lynne Truss? Where I first found out about the Oxford comma. This is a case where you might want grammar checker to be able to read your mind.
I have the problem of changing word spellings while reading with regard to words next to the word or from sentences above or below the word. That makes for slow reading when one reads a sentence over and over without meaning and finally checks it word for word only to find a made up reading of some word. That limits me to about ten pages an hour for literature and does not matter much for math, physics, and chemistry.
I just remember that an adverb has to modify an adjective, and an adjective modifies a noun. So I guess it would depend on whether Assured is considered a noun or an adjective.
The redundant word he hated the most, and I can't think of it right now, but it had something to do with near. Maybe it will come to me.
On the other hand, I once had a newspaper article in which the editor changed the headline from It's Spring to Its Spring. I wanted the contraction of 'it is' not the possessive form of it.
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