Originally posted by jean
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Pedants' Paradise
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This is a sticky topic.
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Originally posted by jean View PostI've been wondering about this.
It sounds awkward to me, though I know each edition of The Early Music Show is a discrete entity and therefore countable.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 PostI would argue that TEMS is not a plural. The 'S' stands for Show. Ergo one show fewer per week. What's the problem?
In a similar (I think) case, I'd always say that's one less thing to worry about in preference to one fewer..., though thing is also singular and countable.
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Originally posted by jean View PostI've been wondering about this.
It sounds awkward to me, though I know each edition of The Early Music Show is a discrete entity and therefore countable.
But I find I really want to say One less TEMS. I think I'm going to try to justify it by regarding less there as an adverb.
Someone at R3 might well want to comment What's one EMS more or less? and though I'd deplore the sentiment, I wouldn't worry too much about the grammar.
However, if we are treating TEMS as a word in itself, then I'm not sure there's any longer a need for capitals beyond the first. If we're not so treating it, then it's just a series of initials and the definite article perhaps ought to be accounted for ("one fewer [edition of] TEMS", "one fewer [edition of] The Early Music Show").Last edited by Pabmusic; 15-09-13, 00:47.
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I think that if we use the initial letters of anything as a pronouncable acronym, we tend to use capitals when we write it.
We also tend not to keep the definite article. I'd seen WATO written several times before I realised it was The World at One.
Whether early music buffs regularly use EMS as a word in its own right, I couldn't say. They don't in my neck of the woods!
I still lean towards an adverbial explanation of the less, or perhaps the whole phrase one less, that I want to use in this context. I see a difference between There'll be fewer EMSs/TEMSs in future and There'll be one less TEMS...
I would recast the phrase as 'one fewer TEMS', so that 'one' more clearly qualifies 'fewer'.
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Originally posted by jean View PostBut isn't it what the fewer qualifies that establishes whether it really needs to be fewer or not, rather than what qualifies it?
Question: "One what fewer?" or "One fewer what?"
Would you say, "There will be one less as from the end of the month?"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 PostWould you say, "There will be one less as from the end of the month?"
Probably the expression more or less interferes - and of course more is never a problem, as it's the same for countables and uncountables.
Cf my imagined R3 person's comment - 'What's one EMS more or less?'
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Originally posted by jean View PostYes I would. I'm just trying to give myself a satisfactory explanation.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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I was wondering about that, too.
Cashier: 'You've got too many items there. You need fewer items.'
Customer (who can't count|) 'How many fewer?'
Cashier: (who can) 'One (or whatever) fewer.'
(They've nearly all gone over to baskets only instead now. And there's always the self-service option.)
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Originally posted by jean View PostI think that if we use the initial letters of anything as a pronouncable acronym, we tend to use capitals when we write it...
But isn't it what the fewer qualifies that establishes whether it really needs to be fewer or not, rather than what qualifies it?
As far as 'fewer' is concerned, the rule as I understand it is that it's 'fewer' when dealing with discrete articles (I've bought fewer CDs this year than last) but 'less' when dealing with quantities that have a singular, collective nature. "I'll have less sugar in that tea, please" but "this spoon picks up fewer grains of sugar than that one does". I also recall that more than one authority says there's no justification for the distinction - it's just a convention.
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