Originally posted by mercia
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Grammar test for would-be pedants
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe answer is that none of them is wrong, but you can't proceed with the quiz until you've chosen one. Mr Gove set this.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostShouldn't that be either 'none of them are wrong', or 'not one of them is wrong'? Or is 'none' really an abbreviation of 'not one'?
edit: Looking at ff's post, it occurs to me that anything involving Mr Gove probably is wrong, per se.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by mangerton View PostMy Chambers - no great authority as it recently got me into trouble around here - indicates that via Old English, it is. It also says, though, that "none" can be singular or plural. I tend to regard "none" as singular, but sometimes that sounds wrong.
edit: Looking at ff's post, it occurs to me that anything involving Mr Gove probably is wrong, per se.
I haven't tried 'the test' but have always tended to consider "none" as singular, though I feel sure that's never prevented me using it in a plural context as well!
With reference to our forum pin-up boy, Mr Gove, his recent comments that he would vote for the UK to leave the EU, even before his leader has embarked on his rather mysterious and solitary 're-negotiations', lends no little strength to your personal appraisal of him.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostShouldn't that be either 'none of them are wrong', or 'not one of them is wrong'? Or is 'none' really an abreviation of 'not one'?
Gowers (who revised Fowler) wrote The Complete Plain Words as guidance for civil servants who had to correspond with the general public. Fraser revised TCPW and on the 'split infinitive' he is quite amusing. Without looking up his exact words, I paraphrase: he advised civil servants not to split infinitives in their letters to the public because the notion that "it is wrong" was so entrenched in the public psyche that they would be thought uneducated and therefore lose the respect of their readers. In other words (perhaps slightly patronisingly?) he was saying, "Humour them in their notions of 'right' and 'wrong' (it does no harm)."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 caught the end of "Woman's Hour" yesterday morning- not my usual listening, I hasten to add- and the presenter read out some piece of grammatical nit-pickery from a Radio4 listener with nothing better to do, criticising her for using the word "translator" rather than "interpreter". The complainant started off by saying he was sorry to be pedantic, but said presenter riposted that she thought he probably wasn't sorry for his pedantry, but actually rather pleased.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Anna
There was a grammar test in The Telegraph a few months ago by Nevile Gwynn (author of best-selling Gwyn’s Grammar) which you might like to try although one question is the same as the BBC quiz
There was also one in The Guardian. I think both of them are harder than the BBC one.
In June, year 6 pupils will sit a National Test in spelling, grammar and punctuation. But how good is your knowledge? Take our quiz for students, teachers and grammar fans
See how you get on with them
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostShouldn't that be either 'none of them are wrong', or 'not one of them is wrong'? Or is 'none' really an abreviation of 'not one'?Originally posted by french frank View PostThere is no fixed rule. I studied the literature on this before I posted the message . I don't believe, technically, 'none' is the exact equivalent of 'not one'. It seems this was not a point on which the Victorian grammarians decided to invent a 'rule'. [Note also the different practice of Gowers and Fraser on 'which' and 'that'. ]...
I like the fact that King Alfred used it as a plural in 888, and that nan was inflected anyway.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostThere was a grammar test in The Telegraph a few months ago by Nevile Gwynn (author of best-selling Gwyn’s Grammar) which you might like to try although one question is the same as the BBC quiz
There was also one in The Guardian. I think both of them are harder than the BBC one.
In June, year 6 pupils will sit a National Test in spelling, grammar and punctuation. But how good is your knowledge? Take our quiz for students, teachers and grammar fans
See how you get on with them
Which of the following sentences uses a subordinate clause at the beginning?Male penguins keep warm by huddling together
In order to stay alive, male penguins keep warm by huddling together
Huddling together helps male penguins to stay alive and keep warm
Option 2 was the only possibility but for me a clause must have a finite main verb. "In order to stay alive" is not a clause but an infinitive phrase. A genuine subordinate clause with a similar meaning might be something like: "because they want to stay alive" or "so that they can stay alive".
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostThe Guardian one was fairly straightforward. I would query No 5.
Which of the following sentences uses a subordinate clause at the beginning?Male penguins keep warm by huddling together
In order to stay alive, male penguins keep warm by huddling together
Huddling together helps male penguins to stay alive and keep warm
Option 2 was the only possibility but for me a clause must have a finite main verb. "In order to stay alive" is not a clause but an infinitive phrase. A genuine subordinate clause with a similar meaning might be something like: "because they want to stay alive" or "so that they can stay alive".
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