Now here's the thing: radio speech has become more like everyday conversation....
Pedants' Paradise
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This is a sticky topic.
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Anybody want to give any advice?
Future question
How do you keep the underside of soap going soggy in the soap dish?
Send tips and questions to homehelp@sunday-times.co.uk. Advice given without responsibility
How do you stop.......
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Originally posted by smittims View PostOr better still 'how do you prevent...'
Interestingly, 'keep' (as in 'preserve') and 'prevent' used to mean the same thing. The Book of Common Prayer has 'prevent us, Lord, in all our doings..'
Though I too prefer prevent.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostOr better still 'how do you prevent...'
Interestingly, 'keep' (as in 'preserve') and 'prevent' used to mean the same thing. The Book of Common Prayer has 'prevent us, Lord, in all our doings..'
No real connection but I was reminded yesterday by an article in the paper of something I find puzzling and irritating in equal measure, which is the use of "going" instead of "becoming" in relation to extinction. It has been around for some time, as in "the species is now at risk of going extinct", but seems to have become the preferred form even in supposedly more educated writing.
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I think that's a fashion; one person hears someone saying it and thinks it sounds smart to be heard saying it. Similarly, we have 'headed' as in 'we're headed towards a crisis' instead of 'we're heading towards a crisis'. But of course this is a vast subject: people not thinking about the meaning of the word they've chosen. My current favourite is 'cathartic' used by someone who's not read Aristotle and means 'therapeutic'. I was sorry to hear this yesterday used by someone I (orherwise) much admire.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI think that's a fashion; one person hears someone saying it and thinks it sounds smart to be heard saying it. Similarly, we have 'headed' as in 'we're headed towards a crisis' instead of 'we're heading towards a crisis'. But of course this is a vast subject: people not thinking about the meaning of the word they've chosen. My current favourite is 'cathartic' used by someone who's not read Aristotle and means 'therapeutic'. I was sorry to hear this yesterday used by someone I (orherwise) much admire.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostOK, fair point, but this is 'Pedant's Paradise' after all...
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI think that's a fashion; one person hears someone saying it and thinks it sounds smart to be heard saying it. Similarly, we have 'headed' as in 'we're headed towards a crisis' instead of 'we're heading towards a crisis'.
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I was just looking back at an old BBC story about the discovery of an unusual silver seal matrix, designated 'treasure' . It included this description:
"The top storey contained a figure of a bishop holding a curled crosier in their left hand, and their right hand held in a blessing position."
As the artefact dated back to the 11th-13th cc. ... 'their'? Why not 'his'? It seems, though, that there might be the remotest of remote possibilities than the bishop might have been the possibly legendary Brigid of Ireland. But I wonder what prompted the writer to be ultra careful here? 'They' did 'their' research, perhaps?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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