November 20, 2014

Book Review: The Sense of Style

Full disclosure: I received an advance review copy of this book from the publisher, Viking. I was intrigued when I first heard that Steven Pinker, the linguist and cognitive scientist, was writing a book on style. I’ve really enjoyed some of his other books, such as The Stuff of Thought, but wasn’t this the guy […]

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November 10, 2014

Interview at Grammarist

Forgive me if you’ve already seen this, but I was interviewed a couple of weeks ago at Grammarist.com. Find out what got me into language blogging, what my greatest accomplishment in the world of language is, and why you should care more about language. Check it out!

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October 7, 2014

Sneak Peek: “There Are a Number of Agreement Problems”

Unless you’re a subscriber to Copyediting newsletter, you don’t get the chance to read my “Grammar on the Edge” column. But now you can get a sneak peek of my most recent entry, “There Are a Number of Agreement Problems,” on Copyediting’s website. You’ll still have to subscribe to get the whole thing, but maybe […]

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October 6, 2014

New Post on Visual Thesaurus: Less Usage Problems

I have a new post on Visual Thesaurus, and this one’s open to non-subscribers: The distinction between less and fewer is one of the most popular rules in the peevers’ arsenal. It’s a staple of lists of grammar rules that everyone supposedly gets wrong, and sticklers have pressured stores into changing their signs from “10 […]

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September 8, 2014

Is the Oxford Comma Ungrammatical?

Few language issues inspire as much fervent debate as the question of whether you need a comma before the last item in a series, also known as the Oxford, Harvard, or serial comma. This is the comma that you sometimes see before and in lists, such as “I need you to go to the store […]

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Punctuation 11 Replies to “Is the Oxford Comma Ungrammatical?”
August 26, 2014

15% Off All T-Shirts

First, I apologize for not blogging in so long. It’s been a crazy summer, complete with a new baby (yay!), a new job (yay!), and moving to a new house (boo!). I’ve got a few posts in the works and hope to have something done soon. Second, it’s time for another sale! Now through September […]

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June 10, 2014

Do Usage Debates Make You Nauseous?

Several days ago, the Twitter account for the Chicago Manual of Style tweeted, “If you’re feeling sick, use nauseated rather than nauseous. Despite common usage, whatever is nauseous induces nausea.” The relevant entry in Chicago reads, Whatever is nauseous induces a feeling of nausea—it makes us feel sick to our stomachs. To feel sick is […]

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Usage, Words 14 Replies to “Do Usage Debates Make You Nauseous?”
June 5, 2014

Celebrate T-Shirt Day with 15% Off

T-shirt day is June 21st, and in preparation for the big day, Spreadshirt is offering 15 percent off all t-shirts when you use the coupon code MYSHIRT2014 between now and June 10th. If you met me at the annual conferences of the American Copy Editors Society and liked my shirts, now’s a good chance to […]

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May 11, 2014

Mother’s Day

Today is officially Mother’s Day, and as with other holidays with possessive or plural endings, there’s a lot of confusion about what the correct form of the name is. The creator of Mother’s Day in the United States, Anna Jarvis, specifically stated that it should be a singular possessive to focus on individual mothers rather […]

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April 24, 2014

Over Has Always Meant More Than. Get Over it.

Last month, at the yearly conference of the American Copy Editors Society, the editors of the AP Stylebook announced that over in the sense of more than was now acceptable. For decades, newspaper copy editors had been changing constructions like over three hundred people to more than three hundred people; now, with a word from […]

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