Originally posted by french frank
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Pedants' Paradise
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This is a sticky topic.
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Extracts (redacted as necessary to avoid identification) from emails my partner got yesterday.
This from an art gallery we have bought from:
Good Afternoon,
I hope you are keeping well.
We have just had two stunning and quite scarce ... come into the gallery that I thought you might like to see.
Both of these we have only had a few times over the years and they never fail to disappoint.
Then this from his accountant (a new person is taking over his affairs):
I believe you should have received our letter explaining that myself and ... will be taking over responsibility for your affairs.
...
We look forward to supporting you moving forwards.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostExtracts (redacted as necessary to avoid identification) from emails my partner got yesterday.
This from an art gallery we have bought from:
We've decided not to buy, as we don't want to be disappointed.
Then this from his accountant (a new person is taking over his affairs):
:eek:
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"This controversial unit of the Ukrainian armed forces is a bête noir of the Russians"
Bête is feminine, so bête noire. Or is bête noir now English for bête noire?
"noun pet hate, horror, nightmare, devil, curse, dread, bogey, scourge, aversion, nemesis, anathema, bane, abomination, bogeyman, bugbear, bugaboo, thorn in the flesh or side Our real bête noire is the car-boot sale."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.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
"noun pet hate, horror, nightmare, devil, curse, dread, bogey, scourge, aversion, nemesis, anathema, bane, abomination, bogeyman, bugbear, bugaboo, thorn in the flesh or side Our real bête noire is the car-boot sale."
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt often strikes me that the French have apparently not chosen to question the gender attached to inanimate objects or concepts. It might be thought sexist to think of beasts as having to be female!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.
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Today's Guardian includes the following from a report of the St Paul's Jubilee service: "It would have taken a heart of stone not to feel some genuine empathy for William, Kate, Charles and Camilla, walking down the aisle to John Ritter, a piece so rousing, so powerfully devotional, that anyone would feel unequal to it." Probably we can excuse the typo which meant it was attributed to a late US sitcom actor, but you'd have hoped someone would have been sufficiently musically aware to know it was Parry's "I was Glad", Rutter merely being the arranger.
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Originally posted by crb11 View PostToday's Guardian includes the following from a report of the St Paul's Jubilee service: "It would have taken a heart of stone not to feel some genuine empathy for William, Kate, Charles and Camilla, walking down the aisle to John Ritter, a piece so rousing, so powerfully devotional, that anyone would feel unequal to it." Probably we can excuse the typo which meant it was attributed to a late US sitcom actor, but you'd have hoped someone would have been sufficiently musically aware to know it was Parry's "I was Glad", Rutter merely being the arranger.
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Originally posted by crb11 View PostToday's Guardian includes the following from a report of the St Paul's Jubilee service: "It would have taken a heart of stone not to feel some genuine empathy for William, Kate, Charles and Camilla, walking down the aisle to John Ritter, a piece so rousing, so powerfully devotional, that anyone would feel unequal to it." Probably we can excuse the typo which meant it was attributed to a late US sitcom actor, but you'd have hoped someone would have been sufficiently musically aware to know it was Parry's "I was Glad", Rutter merely being the arranger.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.
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Originally posted by crb11 View PostToday's Guardian includes the following from a report of the St Paul's Jubilee service: "It would have taken a heart of stone not to feel some genuine empathy for William, Kate, Charles and Camilla, walking down the aisle to John Ritter, a piece so rousing, so powerfully devotional, that anyone would feel unequal to it." Probably we can excuse the typo which meant it was attributed to a late US sitcom actor, but you'd have hoped someone would have been sufficiently musically aware to know it was Parry's "I was Glad", Rutter merely being the arranger.
FF, like you I would have gone for 'sympathy for' or 'empathy with', rather than what was written.
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A sort of grocer's apostrophe in the Indy today with its mention of "black lamb’s wool hats". I doubt it was the wool hats of a particular black lamb (nor even the wool hats of several black lambs). Lambswool normally written as one word.
Not a very happy example to choose to be trivially pedantic about, but this BBC sentence did give me pause just now: "Weeks of heavy Russian shelling have reduced the city mostly to ruins." 'Shelling' is surely the logical subject, not 'weeks'?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.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostA sort of grocer's apostrophe in the Indy today with its mention of "black lamb’s wool hats". I doubt it was the wool hats of a particular black lamb (nor even the wool hats of several black lambs). Lambswool normally written as one word.
Not a very happy example to choose to be trivially pedantic about, but this BBC sentence did give me pause just now: "Weeks of heavy Russian shelling have reduced the city mostly to ruins." 'Shelling' is surely the logical subject, not 'weeks'?
It would of course be simple to rewrite the sentence with 'shelling' as the subject, but I can't see it would necessarily be better.I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostSorry ff, can't see at all how a subject can be in the genitive!
It would of course be simple to rewrite the sentence with 'shelling' as the subject, but I can't see it would necessarily be better.
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