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Anello said: “For almost 20 years I have served both right and left governments indifferently.”
So, no enthusiasm for these extremists? Trust a good moderate.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Here's one from this lunchtime's BBC4 news: "elecTORal". I would always say "eLECtoral", with the stress on the second syllable - it sounds less clumsy, somehow.
There was a lovely malapropism from Daily Depress reporter Carole Malone on this morning's Jeremy Vine show on CH5:
"Oxytoxin is the chemical in the brain that causes sexual arousal".
Surprised to hear Donald Macleod today in a repeated CotW (mis)using the phrase reaching a crescendo: "The row reaching a crescendo...in a fist-fight in church".
What's so bad is that it's the classic error in musical terminological usage.
Pffft!!
Interestingly, the OED has 6 examples ("colloquial (orig. U.S.). The peak of an increase in volume, force, or intensity; a climax. Esp. in to reach a crescendo"), the first from Fitzgerald's Gatsby in 1925, up to the Economist in 1975. But none of these examples has a musical context.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
The music can of course reach a point where a crescendo commences ...
Very logical, and if Donald Macleod had said: "The row reached a point where a crescendo commenced...in a fist-fight in church", there would be no outcry.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Interestingly, the OED has 6 examples ("colloquial (orig. U.S.). The peak of an increase in volume, force, or intensity; a climax. Esp. in to reach a crescendo"), the first from Fitzgerald's Gatsby in 1925, up to the Economist in 1975. But none of these examples has a musical context.
I also react against "reaching a crescendo". It is a present participle, "growing" and as such refers to a process occurring over a period of time not to a point in time. However, whether we like it or not, in modern usage it is very often encountered in the sense of the high point of a crescendo. So it is probably Canute-like to resist. Chambers describes this usage as "figurative":
1.An increase of loudness
2.A passage of increasing loudness
3.A high point, a climax (figurative)
I also react against "reaching a crescendo". It is a present participle, "growing" and as such refers to a process occurring over a period of time not to a point in time. However, whether we like it or not, in modern usage it is very often encountered in the sense of the high point of a crescendo. So it is probably Canute-like to resist. Chambers describes this usage as "figurative":
1.An increase of loudness
2.A passage of increasing loudness
3.A high point, a climax (figurative)
... and of course 'climax' originally meant 'a ladder', and hence 'an ascending series' - rather than the much later usage as a 'culmination'
Pabs, you could calm yourself with a latte and a panini....
A fully paid-up pedant is bound to point out that "panini" is the plural of "panino". A panino might make a decent snack but one spaghetto would be a rather sparse meal.
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