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Contents

2 Writing skills 2: punctuation, spelling and usage

End punctuation 2.3

Full stop 2.4

Question mark 2.5

Exclamation mark 2.6

The comma 2.6

Commas and independent clauses 2.6

Comma splices and run-on or fused sentences 2.7

Commas and items in a series 2.7

Commas with coordinate adjectives and compound nouns 2.8

Commas, sentence beginnings and ambiguity 2.8

Other misuses of the comma 2.9

Commas and restrictive and non-restrictive elements 2.10

The semicolon 2.11

Semicolons and independent clauses 2.11

The colon 2.13

The apostrophe 2.15

The apostrophe: a doomed punctuation mark? 2.17

Capitalisation 2.18

Capitals, proper nouns and adjectives 2.18

Capital offences? 2.19

Parentheses and brackets 2.20

The dash 2.23

The hyphen 2.23

Quotation marks 2.25

Quoted material: short and long 2.26

Quotation marks and other punctuation 2.26

Scare quotes 2.27

Ellipsis 2.27

Spelling 2.28

Spelling errors: where do they come from? 2.29

Eggcorns, mondegreens, malapropisms, homonyms, contranyms and the other usual suspects: beware! 2.29

Spelling: the rules 2.34

Suffixes 2.34

Global English: American versus British spelling 2.38

Spelling reform: the impossible dream? 2.39

Vocabulary and usage 2.40

accede/exceed 2.40

adverse/averse 2.40

advice/advise 2.41

affect/effect 2.41

all ready/already 2.41

anticipate/expect 2.41

apprise/appraise 2.41

because/as/since 2.42

bought/brought 2.42

by 2.42

comparison, false 2.43

compliment/complement 2.43

comprise/consist/compose/include 2.43

counsel/council 2.44

criterion/criteria 2.44

disinterested/uninterested 2.44

dependent/dependant 2.44

elicit/illicit 2.45

enormity/enormousness/immensity 2.45

ferment/foment 2.45

fewer/less 2.45

flaunt/flout 2.45

hopefully 2.45

imply/infer 2.46

irregardless/regardless 2.46

it’s/its 2.46

literally 2.46

loathe/loath 2.47

more 2.47

obsolete/obsolescent 2.47

personnel/personal 2.47

phenomena/phenomenon 2.48

principle/principal 2.48

question, begging the 2.48

sanction 2.49

that/which 2.49

they’re/their/there 2.49

to/too/two 2.50

Summary 2.50

Student study guide 2.51

KEY TERMS 2.51

REVIEW QUESTIONS 2.51

APPLIED ACTIVITIES 2.52

WHAT WOULD YOU DO? 2.54

REFERENCES 2.55

SUGGESTED READING 2.56

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 2.56

Writing skills 2: punctuation, spelling and usage

After reading this chapter you should be able to:

• Explain the relationship between grammar and punctuation

• Explain the use of end punctuation, such as the full stop, the exclamation mark and the

question mark

• Explain the use of other punctuation marks, such as the comma, the colon, the semicolon, the

apostrophe, the dash, the hyphen, parentheses and brackets, quotation marks and ellipses

• Identify and correct the major mechanical and cultural pitfalls in spelling

• Identify and correct some of the major pitfalls in vocabulary and usage

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In online chapter 1 we looked at the grammatical basis of writing skills. Now we turn our

attention to the areas of punctuation, spelling and usage. All these areas interconnect in

interesting ways. For example, we shall soon see that punctuation and grammar are merely

two sides of the same coin and that it is impossible to have a good grasp of grammar without

understanding punctuation.

Indeed, the most influential book on punctuation in recent times, Eats shoots and leaves:

The zero tolerance approach to punctuation (Truss 2003), bears this out (see also Truss &

Timmons 2008). While this author has undoubtedly done a great service by making punctu-

ation a matter of popular discourse (having sold several million copies of Eats . . . worldwide),

critics have pointed out mistakes in her approach (Crystal 2006; Garner 2005). The main fault

of her approach, however, is that there is little or no grammar in it. This fault makes it almost

impossible to give a complete rationale for run-on sentences, sentence fragments or the case

theory behind it’s versus its — to name a few. Truss’s argument is that ‘I am not a gram-

marian. To me a subordinate clause will forever be (since I heard the actor Martin Jarvis

describe it thus) one of Santa’s little helpers’ (Truss 2003, p. 32).

Many misunderstandings arise regarding what is ‘proper English’. The material we will con-

sider here may help to eliminate at least some of these misunderstandings. For example, in the

battle between language descriptivists and prescriptivists (online chapter 1), prescriptivists

may assert that language changes little, if at all, and to the extent that it does, we should

follow the precedents of the ‘classics’ of the canon of English literature. This is not, however,

as easy as it might at first appear. Consider, for example, table 2.1, which shows some of the

spelling and punctuation used by Jane Austen in the first edition of Pride and Prejudice (1813).

Source: Austen 2006 (1813).

Of particular interest is the punctuation employed by Austen. Sutherland (2007) suggests

that Austen’s original manuscript style followed rhetorical punctuation rather than syntactic (or

grammatical) punctuation (see table. 2.2), and that male editors changed her style to syntactic

punctuation (and compositors or typesetters inserted paragraphing). (Note Austen’s use of the

apostrophe in possessive pronouns — see online chapter 1.)

Austen was fighting, in a sense, a losing war, as the long-term trend in English for

centuries has been moving away from rhetorical grammar (based on sound or phonology, and

the breathing capacity of the reader if reading out loud) to syntactic, based on meaning units

within sentences, although Charles Dickens was in the habit of re-working various editions of

his books, including re-punctuating a later edition of Oliver Twist to a more rhetorical style,

with shorter sentences and the replacement of many commas with colons (Horne 2003,

pp. 533–4). This use of rhetorical grammar may have been because Dickens was building a

career as a public reader of his works. He was, however, a heroic exception. As history

repeats, Baron now argues that email is shifting the balance back, with email writers

Austen’s spelling Austen’s punctuation

Choose = chuse

Develop = develop

Teasing = teazing

Mien = mein

Sore throat = sore-throat

Ankles = ancles

Showed = shewed

Style = stile

Screens = skreens

Sofas = sophas

Headache = headach

Hers = her’s

Yours = your’s

But Jane could think with certainty on only one

point, — that Mr Bingley . . .

Very true, indeed; — and now, my dear Jane . . .

Mr Darcy’s shameful boast of what misery he had

been able to inflict, gave her a keener sense . . .

His attachment to Rosings, certainly increases.

Table 2.1: Spelling and

punctuation: then and

now

Rhetorical punctuation: punctuation based on the

idea that units within a

sentence should be

separated according to

breath capacity

Syntactic punctuation: punctuation based on the

idea that word units within

a sentence should be

separated according to

meaning

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punctuating as if they were speaking rather than writing (Baron 2000; see also Schou 2007).

This, of course, may not necessarily be a good thing.

Thus, even today, the most common myth is that punctuation is rhetorical, meaning they

are little better than ‘breath marks,’ rather than tools to clarify meaning.

Source: Adapted from Baron (2000, p. 170).

Try to avoid using a rhetorical approach in your writing. If your hypothetical reader

reading your text out loud is to avoid going blue in the face waiting for a comma (and in

danger of lapsing into a coma), recast your sentence using appropriately placed commas,

colons, semicolons and dashes (see table 2.3). You may find that the sentence, or more than

one sentence split from the original, will give your prose a rhythm and grace that it might

otherwise lack, and will help to frame your meaning, not only with commas and dashes, but

italics for emphasis and dashes and ellipses for special effects.

Punctuation marks are used to make the meaning of written words clear. Some are pauses;

some have other functions (see table 2.3). In this respect, they are like the musical notation to

match, reinforce and counterpoint the words or the ‘lyrics’ of the sentence.

End punctuationSyntax is the aspect of grammar that deals with sentence formation, and we have already

considered grammatical tests for sentences and sentence fragments (see online chapter 1,

p. 1.28). There are three forms of punctuation signalling the end of a sentence (see table 2.4).

Rhetorical punctuation Syntactic punctuation

Rationale A comma is inserted wherever a major breath

group ends, regardless of the overall grammatical

structure of the sentence. The restrictive relative

clause ‘who lurked outside my office for weeks

on end’ is rhetorically separated from the main

verb (‘turned out’) by a comma.

Grammatical punctuation forbids

breaking up the subject and the

verb.

Example The shadowy figure who lurked outside my office

for weeks on end, turned out to be a private

detective.

The shadowy figure who lurked

outside my office for weeks on

end [no comma] turned out to be a

private detective.

Long pause Medium pause Short pause

Full stop . Colon : Comma ,

Exclamation mark ! Semicolon ;

Question mark ? Dash —

For Use Example

Full stop Used at the end of a statement. I handed her the document.

Question mark Used at the end of a direct question. Did you give her the document?

Exclamation mark Used at the end of a forceful and/or

emotional statement.

Give me that document now!

Table 2.2: Rhetorical and syntactic punctuation

Table 2.3: Punctuation marks and different pause lengths

Table 2.4: Forms of end punctuation

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Full stop Full stops (also known as points or periods) perform different functions from exclamation marks

or question marks, but some commands and questions are more appropriately punctuated with

full stops. For example:

Full stops are also used to show abbreviation, or shortening (see table 2.5).

Table 2.5: Common abbreviations using full stops

Abbreviation Full form

Dr. Doctor

M.D. Medicinae Doctor (Latin, doctor of medicine)

Ph.D. Philosophiae Doctor (Latin, doctor of philosophy)

B.A. Bachelor of Arts, British Academy

Mr. Mister

Mrs. Mistress

Ms. Alternative to Mrs. and Miss (note that Miss is not an abbreviation)

A.M. ante meridiem (Latin, before noon)

P.M. post meridiem (Latin, after noon)

B.C. Before Christ

A.D. anno Domini (Latin, in the year of Our Lord)

B.P. Before Present (before 1950: reference date for carbon dating)

Full stop: used to show the

end of a sentence

Mild command Would you please fasten your seat belts.

Can you fill in the form using ink, not pencil.

Indirect question She asked whether I would have it completed

by five o’clock.

(Compare with the direct form: She asked,

‘Will you have it completed by five o’clock?’)

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Table 1.5 (continued)

Be aware, however, that usage is changing all the time; some organisations and style

authorities now prefer the full stop to be dropped in abbreviations, as long as ambiguity does

not occur as a result. This style is known as open punctuation.

When in doubt, try to find out what is acceptable to your audience.

Question mark

The question mark is a unit of end punctuation used to show that the preceding sentence is

interrogative (asking a question) (see online chapter 3, p. 3.19).

Question marks are used for direct questions, but not indirect questions. Remember that a

question mark, like an exclamation mark, has the same punctuation weight or value as a full

stop and therefore does not require any additional punctuation to terminate a question. Thus,

He asked, ‘Can you bring it over here?’.

is wrong. The full stop is unnecessary.

Questions in a series each take a question mark, even though each question may not be a

complete sentence:

We have to consider every possible aspect of this contract. What are the terms? Who

benefits? What price will they offer? Over the market value? Under? About the average?

Question marks are sometimes used to signal to the reader that the writer has doubts about

a date or figure:

Charlemagne (742?– 814) was the first Holy Roman Emperor.

We lost 230 (?) litres of oil in that storm.

This usage is acceptable for brief statements, such as birth and death dates, about which

there is uncertainty, but try to avoid it in other situations. Convey uncertainty or approximation

with words such as about:

We lost about 230 litres of oil in the storm.

Abbreviation Full form

B.C.E. Before Common Era (same as B.C., but without Christian reference)

C.E. Common Era (same as A.D., but without Christian reference)

e.g. exempli gratia (Latin, for example)

i.e. id est (Latin, that is)

p. page

Open punctuation: a style of

punctuation that uses

minimal punctuation marks

or no punctuation

Question mark: a unit of

end punctuation used to

show that the preceding

sentence is interrogative

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You should also try to avoid conveying sarcasm or irony with a question mark:

I am sure you will enjoy her off-beat (?) sense of humour.

Question marks are also used for rhetorical questions, or questions to which no real answer

is expected because the answer is so obvious.

Is the sky blue?

How many times have I told you not to do that?

Exclamation markTo maximise the impact of exclamation marks, minimise their use. Try to avoid constructions

such as:

We’ve really got to perform well this year! No ifs buts or maybes! It’s number one or

nothing at all for us! We’ve got to get the numbers up! All of us!

You may think you are being persuasive and inspirational, but others may think you are

merely being shrill and hysterical. As with the use of capital letters (p. 2.18), a little goes a

long way, while more than a little is self-defeating. As F. Scott Fitzgerald once put it, ‘Cut out

all those exclamation marks. An exclamation mark is like laughing at your own jokes’ (cited

in Underwood 2004).

Try to avoid using the exclamation mark to convey amazement, sarcasm or irony. For

example:

Head Office has announced that the production goal is 23 000 units (!) this year.

If you have doubts about a situation, and you are willing to draw attention to such doubts,

express the doubts in words so that your meaning is clear:

Head Office has announced that the production goal is 23 000 units this year (my personal

view is that we may have difficulty reaching this figure).

The commaThe comma is a unit of punctuation internal to a sentence used to show a separation of ideas

or elements.

Commas and independent clauses Commas can be used in compound sentences to separate independent clauses linked by the

coordinating conjunctions for, and, nor, but, or, yet and so (see online chapter 1, p. 1.26):

She said that she would fax me, but I’ve received nothing so far.

The new model will have leather upholstery, and it should be available next week.

In shorter sentences the comma can be omitted:

The new model was available and it was affordable.

Exclamation mark: a unit of

end punctuation used to

indicate a forceful, loud or

angry remark

Comma: a unit of

punctuation internal to a

sentence used to show

separation of ideas or

elements

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Comma splices and run-on or fused sentences Two of the most common sentence construction faults are the comma splice and the run-on

or fused sentence:

The comma is not ‘strong’ enough to separate these two independent clauses, while the

run-on or fused sentence simply jams the clauses together without any pausing. The thoughts

conveyed in independent clauses should be given their full weight or value in the overall

rhythm of the sentence. Looking at or listening to comma splices and run-on sentences is like

listening to a drummer who keeps hitting the beat too soon. Don’t be in such a hurry. If you

are linking independent clauses, use one of several means (see table 2.6).

Table 2.6: Linking independent clauses

Note that combining independent clauses with no punctuation or conjunctions leads to a

fused sentence (See online chapter 1 for definitions and examples of sentences and sentence

fragments, p. 1.28).

Commas and items in a series Consider these sentences:

We will need costings on computers, printers, screens and modems.

They walked in, looked around, and then walked out again.

Stylistic conventions vary about whether a comma should come before the final and in

such sentences. The style in the United States has been to use a comma before the final and,

Link Clauses/sentences

Conjunction + comma It sounded like a bus, but the street was empty of any vehicle.

Semicolon The northern division claims that it will deliver on budget this year;

time, of course, will tell if this is true.

Colon There are only two things that will see us on top this year: they are

technical excellence and the will to win.

Full stop (break into two

sentences).

The goal is simply unattainable. The sooner people around here

acknowledge that, the sooner we can set some more realistic

figures.

Comma splice The new model will be blue in colour, it

should be available next week.

Run-on/fused sentence The new model will be blue in colour it should

be available next week.

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whereas the British and Australian styles have tended towards leaving it out, unless it is

needed to remove any ambiguity (see also Wilson 1993).

If a list is complex, particularly if the items are modified by clauses or phrases that in turn

are set off with commas, it is better to use semicolons:

To get optimal performance, we will use Access, the Microsoft database package;

Lotus 1-2-3, the IBM spreadsheet; and Word Perfect, the Corel word processor.

Commas with coordinate adjectives and compound nounsCoordinate adjectives modify the same noun or pronoun. They are separated by coordinating

conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) (see online chapter 1, p. 1.26) or by a comma. If

their order is reversed, or if the conjunction and is inserted between the adjectives, the

meaning of the sentence does not change.

A loud, ugly crowd gathered in the square.

The sleek, streamlined photocopier hummed when turned on.

A comma is also not required between an adjective and a compound noun (adjective +

noun). In the following examples the compound nouns are technical officer and area

manager.

He is such a foul-tempered technical officer.

Tim and Liza are aggressive area managers.

Commas, sentence beginnings and ambiguity Sentences often begin with introductory words, phrases and clauses. The comma can provide

the pause needed to separate such introductions from the major message of the sentence

(see table 2.7).

Some writers prefer to leave out these types of commas, arguing that such commas are

unnecessary. It is true that commas can be overdone, but they can help to reduce ambiguity

and avoid confusion (see also online chapter 1). Consider, for example, these sentences:

He painted rose and left.

When the operator has completed the wiring display voltage may decline.

If all letters are signed quickly post them.

Once you have checked the draft data reports can be completed.

She stood abruptly closed her computer and left.

DOS performance is not sacrificed providing instantaneous screen updates in the latest

games.

With added investigative powers available to police Victoria’s rate of apprehending

criminals is the best it’s been for 18 years.

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Table 2.7: Commas at sentence beginnings

Some of these ambiguities relate to words that can be either verbs, nouns, adverbs or adjec-

tives, depending on context. Your reader should not have to work hard to decipher your

meaning. Your reader should have to read your words only once, not twice or a number of

times. Even multiple readings may not yield your true meaning if the ambiguity is embedded

in the structure of the sentence:

Any misunderstandings arising from such confusion might be minor, but they could well

be major in certain circumstances. Punctuation may help clarify, but some recasting, with

additional and/or different words, may also be necessary (see online chapter 3).

Other misuses of the comma

We saw earlier the distinction between rhetorical punctuation and syntactic punctuation

(online chapter 1), and how the syntactic style is now preferred. Bear this in mind when

placing your commas, as rhetorical punctuation may distract your reader, and throw the wrong

emphasis upon the different ideas in your sentences. Keep the following guidelines in mind.

Introductory unit Examples Example in sentence

Conjunctive adverb however, still, indeed, finally,

consequently

Indeed, the very reliability of that

data is suspect.

Transitional expression on the other hand; in addition;

for example; as a result; in

conclusion

In conclusion, we need to

smarten up our act in all four of

these areas.

Prepositional phrase beyond the window; down the

street

Beyond the window, a beautiful

vista spread out to the horizon.

Participial phrase walking down the street; opened

only yesterday

Opened only yesterday, the store

was already doing a thriving

business.

Infinitive phrase to cut a long story short To cut a long story short, we

failed to meet the deadline.

Absolute phrase training funds now being

available; other things being

equal

Other things being equal, we

should be able to meet that

deadline.

Adverb clause (starting with

subordinating conjunction)

before you begin that course;

unless we hear from you

Before you begin that course,

make sure that your voicemail

message is updated.

Meaning 1 Meaning 2

When the operator has completed the wiring,

display voltage may decline.

When the operator has completed the wiring

display, voltage may decline.

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Firstly, don’t use a comma after a subject or a verb:

No: The big Doberman dog, walked down the hallway.

No: The big Doberman dog walked, down the hallway.

Yes: The big Doberman dog walked down the hallway.

Don’t use a comma after conjunctions (and, but, because, although):

No: She disagreed with me at the outset but, we eventually agreed.

Yes: She disagreed with me at the outset but we eventually agreed.

Yes: She disagreed with me at the outset, but we eventually agreed.

Yes: She disagreed with me at the outset, but, we eventually agreed. (dramatic pause).

Commas and restrictive and non-restrictive elements

Phrases, clauses and words can act as modifiers in sentences. Some of these sentence elements

need to be punctuated with commas, and some do not. Consider for example these sentences:

Computer monitors, using either traditional cathode ray tube technology or newer plasma

technology, are an important part of our budget planning for next year.

Computer monitors using plasma technology are expensive but safer and more compact.

Both sentences feature phrases modifying or telling us about the same subject: computer

monitors. In the first sentence, the phrase ‘using either traditional cathode ray tube technology

or newer plasma technology’ is a non-restrictive element or a piece of non-essential information.

It could be chopped out, leaving a sentence that would still be meaningful and fairly specific:

In the second sentence, the phrase ‘using plasma technology’ is essential information, and

removing it will distort the sentence’s meaning:

Non-restrictive elements, such as non-restrictive phrases, clauses and words, can be removed

from a sentence without doing too much damage to the basic meaning of the sentence. These

elements are usually set apart with commas, although sometimes parentheses or dashes are

used. Restrictive elements cannot be removed without changing or destroying the meaning of

the sentence, and should not be set off with punctuation (see online chapter 1).

Original sentence Sentence with non-essential information removed

Computer monitors, using either traditional cathode ray

tube technology or newer plasma technology, are an

important part of our budget planning for next year.

Computer monitors are an important part of our budget

planning for next year.

Original sentence Sentence with essential information removed

Computer monitors using plasma technology are

expensive but safer and more compact.

Computer monitors are expensive but safer and more

compact.

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Here are some other uses of commas:

Make any changes you feel are necessary to the punctuation in the following:

(a) The main question the meeting had to consider, he said with some force, was whether the

performance of under-achievers was to be tolerated any longer?

(b) The police officer shouted ‘Stop!’.

(c) Where is it, I thought I left it over here?

(d) The main thing to concentrate on is the production report anything else is purely second

priority.

(e) I have never read such a depressing, annual report.

(f) I have never encountered such an apathetic, accounting class.

(g) If we don’t see the draft data reports may not be as reliable as head office wants.

(h) You need to tell it to him straight away, from the prying eyes and ears of certain team

members.

(i) Customer contact staff, from the night shift, need to be made aware of this fault in the

equipment.

(j) Yours, sincerely Jo Baynes.

The semicolonThe semicolon is a unit of punctuation internal to a sentence that usually separates two

independent clauses linked in meaning.

Semicolons and independent clauses Independent clauses are often separated by coordinating conjunctions ( for, and, nor, but, or,

yet, so), but they can also be separated by semicolons, colons and full stops. The full stop is

used to break the clauses into separate sentences, and is chosen when the writer wants to

separate one complete thought from another.

Writers use semicolons and colons when they want to emphasise the link between two

(or more) clauses. The semicolon is used when the clauses are relatively equal and balanced,

and when the writer wants to create mild suspense or expectation in the reader:

Here is the first statement; here is the second statement.

After salutations Dear Mary,

Ladies and gentlemen,

After closings Yours sincerely,

With titles Prakesh Shastri, Manager, Acquisitions Division

Robert Sanborn, Jr.

Celeste Sanborn, Ph.D.

With addresses 2056 Lagrange Grove, Duckburg 68023

Leading into quotations At this point in the play, Hamlet says, ‘To be or not to be’.

ASSESS YOURSELF

Semicolon: a unit of

punctuation internal to a

sentence, usually

separating two independent

clauses linked in meaning

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I was angry with her; she was angry with me.

Handling databases was one of her skills; handling spreadsheets was another.

The semicolon is sometimes an invitation to read the first part of the sentence with a rising

inflection, and the second part of the sentence with a falling inflection.

Conjunctive adverbs, such as accordingly, also, anyhow, anyway, besides, consequently,

furthermore, hence, however, indeed, meanwhile, moreover, namely, nevertheless, similarly,

still, therefore and thus can be used to link independent clauses. The semicolon is often used

to link clauses that start with a conjunctive adverb, as some writers believe that the full stop

is too strong (see online chapter 1).

She has the qualifications; consequently, she must be considered to be a candidate for the

job.

The machine is producing only 305 units an hour; therefore, we know that something is

amiss.

The semicolon can be replaced by a comma (or by nothing) if a coordinating conjunction

is added to the link between independent clauses:

She has the qualifications, and therefore she must be considered to be a candidate for the

job.

The semicolon is a medium pause signal, halfway in strength between the comma (short

pause) and the full stop (long pause). It can be usefully employed when a sentence contains a

number of phrases and clauses already separated by commas, but where the commas are not

adequate to unambiguously define discrete units of meaning (see table 2.8).

The main misuse of the semicolon is to use it as a colon — in particular, to introduce a

quotation.

Table 2.8: The semicolon used to reduce or eliminate ambiguity

Discrete units of meaning Potentially ambiguous sentence Clearer sentence

To get optimal performance To get optimal performance, we

will use Access 2010, the

Microsoft database package,

Lotus 1-2-3 v 10, the IBM

spreadsheet, Mozilla

Thunderbird email, and Word

Perfect X3, the Corel word

processor.

To get optimal performance, we

will use Access 2010, the

Microsoft database package;

Lotus 1-2-3 v 10, the IBM

spreadsheet; Mozilla

Thunderbird email; and Word

Perfect X3, the Corel word

processor.

We will use

Access 2010

the Microsoft database

package

Lotus 1-2-3 version 10

the IBM spreadsheet

Mozilla Thunderbird email

Word Perfect X3

the Corel word processor

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But do we really need the semicolon? In April 2008, controversy erupted in France about

the perceived decline of the point-virgule or semicolon (Henley 2008). Some French writers,

such as Claude Duneton, seemed to believe that English was having a negative effect on

French, and as English sentences were perceived to be shorter, there was less opportunity to

use the semicolon: ‘To make long sentences, you need a nice fountain pen and a good piece

of paper. Short sentences come from the more direct, ‘Anglo-Saxon’ style that reflects the

modern age and the need for speed’ (Claude Duneton, in Bremner 2008). You might not think

that a punctuation mark would evoke passionate responses, and would have enemies and

friends, but it is so. Here are some of their views.

Sources: Henley (2008); Bremner (2008); Sheffer (2006).

The colonThe colon is used primarily to link a clause to a word, phrase or another clause that amplifies,

exemplifies or summarises it.

Semicolon (for) Semicolon (against)

(It) is indispensable for healthy reasoning . . . ‘Punctuation is not leftwing or rightwing; it transcends the political divide . . . For me it is a symbol of a Republic that reasons correctly’.Alain Rey (Editor, Robert Dictionary)

No semicolons. Semicolons indicate relationships that only idiots need defined by punctuation. Besides, they are ugly.(Richard Hugo, The Triggering Town: Lectures

and Essays on Poetry and Writing)

You practically do not use semicolons at all. This is a symptom of mental defectiveness, probably induced by camp life. (George Bernard Shaw to TE Lawrence, on The Seven

Pillars of Wisdom)

(It is) a parasite, a timid, fainthearted, insipid thing, denoting merely uncertainty, a lack of audacity, a fuzziness of thought. (François Cavanna)

They are a close cousin to conjunctions: one could write ‘Billy kicked Susan and Susan cried’ or ‘Billy kicked Susan; Susan cried’. Whereas the conjunction explains the relationship between these two events, a semicolon slyly suggests one without revealing it. It could mean ‘and’, ‘so’, ‘then’ or even ‘but’. Readers must stop and consider what relationship is implied. We must slow down and search for the context. (Marguerite Sheffer)

If you really want to hurt your parents, and you don’t have the nerve to be a homosexual, the least you can do is go into the arts. But do not use semicolons. They are transvestite hermaphrodites, standing for absolutely nothing. All they do is show you’ve been to college. (Kurt Vonnegut)

. . . it can stop a sentence from touching the ground, from grinding to a halt; keeps it suspended, awake. It is a most upmarket punctuation mark. (Michel Volkovitch)

I had decided about this time that the semicolon is an unnecessary stop and that I would write my next book without one. (George Orwell)

Colon: used to introduce information that amplifies, exemplifies or summarises what precedes it

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This system has even greater capacity: it can hold 2000 gigabytes of data.

We have only one aim this year: to beat the competition hands down.

My fantastic success can be explained by one personal quality: humility.

Some American writers use a capital letter after a colon, but this convention is rarely used

elsewhere (an initial capital is of course appropriate if that word is a proper noun).

The colon is also used to introduce a list or series:

Production levels, in the final analysis, will depend upon three factors:

• good weather,

• low equipment downtime, and

• harmonious industrial relations.

The colon can also be used to introduce a quotation:

One expert sums it up thus: ‘The greenhouse effect could be substantially slowed if people

simply walked, used bicycles, or drove electric cars’.

Other uses of the colon include:

If a sentence finishes in a noun or noun phrase the material after the colon will be in

apposition (providing a further explanation) (see online chapter 1).

Don’t place a colon between a verb and its complement, a verb and its object, or a

preposition and its object, or after including or comprising:

After salutations Dear Mary:

In memos To: You

From: Me

Re/Subject: The Meaning of Life

Date: 4th June, 2005

To separate hours, minutes, seconds 10:32:16

In Bible citations Psalms 23:6

To separate book titles and subtitles in

reference lists

Curzan, Anne & Adams, Michael 2009. How

English words: A linguistic introduction,

Upper Saddle River, NJ, Pearson/Longman.

No Yes

The two months of the year named after

Roman emperors are: July and August.

The two months of the year named after

Roman emperors are July and August.

We will be listening to various jazz-oriented

keyboard players, including: Diana Krall,

Keith Jarrett, Joe Zawinul, Herbie Hancock

and Jamie Cullum.

We will be listening to various jazz-oriented

keyboard players, including Diana Krall, Keith

Jarrett, Joe Zawinul, Herbie Hancock and

Jamie Cullum.

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The apostropheThe apostrophe has two main uses:

• to show possession or ownership in nouns and indefinite pronouns

• to show that one or more letters have been omitted from a word.

In the previous chapter, we considered the possessive case of personal pronouns (online

chapter 1).

With singular nouns, the apostrophe plus an s is placed at the end to indicate possession.

With plural nouns, only an apostrophe is placed at the end to indicate possession. If a plural

noun does not need an s suffix to form a plural — for example, children, sheep, women — the

plural noun behaves like a singular, taking an apostrophe before the s. Indefinite pronouns

include anybody, anyone, everybody, everyone, everything, neither, nobody, no one, one, some

and somebody. These behave like singulars, even if plural reference is obvious:

The rules set out in table 2.9 should also be considered.

Table 2.9: More apostrophe rules

Rule Example

When singular nouns end in s, add ’s to

indicate possession.

The glass’s contents

Santa Claus’s beard

Barry Thomas’s anger

When plural nouns end in s, add only the

apostrophe to indicate possession.

The glasses’ contents

The Santa Clauses’ beards

The Thomases’ anger

In compound words or word groups, add the ’s

only to the last word.

Her sister-in-law’s phone number

The plant manager’s schedule

The deputy assistant director’s mail

When two or more words show joint or

combined possession, add ’s or an apostrophe

only to the last word

Laurel and Hardy’s films

Linda and Michael’s wedding

Marks & Spencer’s sale

When two or more words show individual or

separate possession, add ’s or an apostrophe to

each of them.

Laurel’s and Hardy’s differing styles

Personnel’s and Marketing’s parking slots

Barry’s and Melinda’s individual results

Apostrophe: a unit of

punctuation used to show

omission and words in

possessive or genitive case

Before the s After the s

Singular nouns Special plural nouns Indefinite pronouns Plural nouns

• The bird’s cry

• The report’s

conclusions

• Iraq’s oil

production

• Destiny’s child

• Children’s laughter

• Men’s hats

• Sheep’s fleeces

• Everybody’s

responsibility

• Anyone’s guess

• The birds’ cries

• The reports’

conclusions

• Both countries’ oil

production

• The boys’ toys

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Apostrophes can be used to show that letters, numbers or words have been omitted (see

table 2.10).

Table 2.10: Apostrophes and contractions

Apostrophes are not used to form plurals of nouns:

There are some rare exceptions to this rule (e.g. p’s and q’s). If in doubt, consult a style

guide.

Apostrophes are also not needed in verbs:

Shortened form Original form Shortened form Original form

can’t cannot shan’t shall not

we’ve we have we’ll we will/shall

who’s who is/has they’re they are

you’re you are doesn’t does not

I’m I am let’s let us

won’t will not aren’t are not

surfin’ (non-standard) surfing talkin’ (non-standard) talking

o’clock of the clock ’95 1995 (but context may

suggest another

century: e.g. 1895)

No Yes

Vegetable’s for sale Vegetables for sale

The computers’ need an upgrade. The computers need an upgrade.

No Yes

• He walk’s • He walks

• It barks’ all night • It barks all night

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Apostrophes should not be used to show possession in personal pronouns. Pronouns such

as his, hers, its, ours, yours and theirs are already in the possessive case (see online

chapter 1), and do not require an apostrophe to show possession:

It’s/its causes much confusion. Remember that the apostrophe in it’s shows omission, not

possession. If you are in doubt, expand any its/it’s to it is. If this expansion makes sense,

then the it’s in question is actually it is; if it doesn’t make sense, then the its is a possessive:

The apostrophe: a doomed punctuation mark?The apostrophe causes much confusion, and for most of the history of the English language

writers managed to do quite well without it. It was introduced in the sixteenth century only

to indicate omission. The possessive use came in later centuries, often surrounded with as

much confusion as there is today. Some language reformers have suggested getting rid of it

altogether or at least getting rid of it to indicate possession (Burridge 2004). Other stylists,

however, find it indispensable. What do you think?

Punctuate the following sentences correctly using semicolons, colons and apostrophes.

(a) Make sure you invite Joe Bolling, the area manager, Julia Soames, the personnel director, the

chief financial officer, and Roland Tau, our negotiation consultant. (Punctuate to show that four

people are being invited.)

(b) The A team will use its translation skills to decipher the Internet site text similarly the B team

will use its translation skills to make sense of the documents which have been held in the vault

for ten years.

(c) We all need to remember that old saying; don’t wish too hard, or you might end up getting your

wish.

(d) The project will test the abilities of our top team, comprising; Louis, from IT, Mai from

merchandising, and Wally from production.

(e) The four daughter’s stockings were getting drenched hanging on the line.

(f) Its in everyones’ best interests that we talk to the police sooner rather than later.

No Yes

• What’s our’s is yours’ • What’s ours is yours

• It’s bark is annoying • Its bark is annoying

Sentence Expansion Analysis

The dog is here on the

verandah. It’s wagging its tail.

• It is wagging • Makes sense — therefore it’s is punctuated correctly.

• It is tail • Makes no sense — therefore its is punctuated correctly.

The dog is here on the

verandah. Its wagging it’s tail.

• Its wagging • Makes no sense as a possessive pronoun before a gerund

form of wagging; therefore, its is punctuated incorrectly.

• It is tail • Makes no sense; therefore it’s is punctuated incorrectly.

ASSESS YOURSELF

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(g) We need to consider both Sales and Purchasing’s points of view on this one.

(h) Whose you’re malicious’ little friend?

(i) I find it quite hard mastering the intricacie’s of apostrophes’.

(j) When alls said and done, whats’ mine’ is yours’ and whats your’s is mine.

Capitalisation Capital letters are upper-case letters (e.g. A, B, C), as opposed to lower-case letters (e.g. a, b,

c). An initial capital letter is used for the first word in a sentence:

Please walk down the street.

Walk down the street!

Will you walk down the street?

Capitalisation can be considered to be an aspect of punctuation or an aspect of spelling.

Capitals are also used for complete quotations, where a sentence leads into a quote:

The writer then said, ‘There is a case to be made for the abolition of the apostrophe’.

However, note this construction:

‘There is a case to be made,’ the writer said, ‘for the abolition of the apostrophe.’

Here, a capital begins the sentence, and begins the quotation, but is not used for the second

part of the quotation because it is not the beginning of the sentence being quoted.

Note also this:

The writer noted that there is a case to be made for ‘the abolition of the apostrophe’.

The quotation is not a complete sentence, and therefore does not need a capital letter.

Capitals, proper nouns and adjectives Initial capital letters are used for proper nouns and adjectives. Proper nouns are those that

identify people by name or by title, divine/sacred entities, geographical places, religions, days,

months, festivals, organisations, common nouns when personified and given unique refer-

ence, publications, languages, nationalities and proprietary/brand objects. Proper adjectives

are those adjectives formed from proper nouns.

Capitalisation: upper-case

letters used to begin the

first word in a sentence,

words of special

significance and/or proper

nouns or adjectives

Proper nouns Proper adjectives

China Chinese

Islam Islamic

Aborigine Aboriginal

Rubens Rubenesque

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Notice that some proper nouns become common nouns or adjectives when a general, rather

than a specific, meaning is intended:

The excavation and rewiring taking place in the Department of Environment building have

made it a distinctly noisy and dusty environment.

Over time, some proper nouns become common nouns/adjectives or eponyms (objects, ideas

or groups that have taken on the name of a person) (e.g. cardigan, sandwich, boycott,

spoonerism, bunsen burner, sadistic, chauvinist). As such, they begin with lower-case letters.

Similarly, some commercial product names or trademarks have, in different parts of the

world, become virtually generic terms. These include:

Be wary of overusing capitals. A writer can very quickly give the impression that he or she

is trying too hard to impress.

Capital offences?Capitalisation protocols have varied enormously over the centuries, and from place to place.

German uses capitals for virtually all nouns, and if you hunt around in libraries or on the net

to try to find examples of very early modern English, especially the seventeenth and eight-

eenth century, many nouns were capitalised also — so much so, that the effect can be quite

jarring for the modern reader. Romance (i.e. Roman or Latin-derived) languages, such as

French, Spanish and Italian, make much less use of capitals.

Concerns have recently been raised that communication practices on electronic hardware

and software (such as computers, instant messaging, text messaging, email, MySpace, Face-

book and so on) are undermining modern traditions of capitalisation — indeed, to the extent

that its demise has been predicted (Lewin 2008). A 2008 study of American students and their

parents, however, was less pessimistic, with most students believing that texting was not

‘writing’ in the conventional sense — it was, in effect, a dialect or sub-language or register,

and they would naturally switch back to established conventions rather than texting short-

hand or smiley faces if they want good grades or marks (Lenhart et al. 2008).

In other words, the functional value of doing away with capitals to begin sentences and to

denote proper nouns (shorthand or speeding things up, a playful sense of language, and

throughout history, the attraction of slang, jargon or sub-languages to denote membership of

an in-group) were not proving fatal to formal conventions of spelling, and punctuation for

that matter.

You would, for example, be most unwise to use ‘net lingo’ in a resume or job application

letter. There is no great problem here: style or register in new forms of communication can be

fun and reinforcing one’s sense of identity, and in a sense makes you more ‘multilingual’ —

able to effortlessly shift between language communities, demonstrating your versatility, and

perhaps even gain insights into the behavioural dynamics of those communities — in the

same way a business executive might use highly formal diction at a meeting, slang in a pub

Original proprietary name Use as generic term for Lower-case usage

• Spam

• Scotch tape

• Rollerblade

• Band Aid

• canned meat

• adhesive tape

• in-line skates

• an adhesive dressing

• spam

• scotch tape

• rollerblades

• bandaid

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or bar, and abbreviations, slang and diminutives at home. Such code switching can help your

communication repertoire.

The value of the initial capital however remains: mediaeval manuscripts had no capitals

and simply ran sentences together, all in lower case. The introduction of the initial capital

reduced the cognitive load on the reader trying to work out where one thought ended and

another began, and that virtue persists today. Also note that some writers will use capitals in

quasi-facetious sense to cue us, as readers, to suggest a rhetorical tactic of emphasis of

another writer of speaker:

The candidate, rather tiresomely, retreated to clichés about Working Families and the

threat of The Terrorist Next Door to appeal to, and frighten, his audience.

Parentheses and bracketsParentheses, brackets and dashes are all punctuation marks that allow a writer to add extra

information, usually subsidiary to the main thrust of the sentence.

Note that British and American usage vary here: what Americans call parentheses, the

British call brackets, and what Americans call brackets, the British call square brackets.

Australian usage tends to follow either British or American usage, as tradition and logic

dictates. American usage is followed here.

Commas can also be used to convey additional information. For example:

She performed, unlike the others, extremely well in the test.

Punctuation marks setting off additional information — commas, parentheses, brackets

and dashes — occur in pairs. Dashes can appear in pairs as in the previous sentence, or

singly. Just to complicate matters, such additional information is usually referred to as

parenthetical material (even though punctuation apart from parentheses, or curved brackets,

may be used).

When reading aloud sentences that contain material set apart with commas, parentheses,

brackets or dashes, a convention is to lower the pitch of the voice for the duration of the

material set apart:

She performed unlike the others extremely well in the test.

When you use abbreviations and acronyms, consider providing an explanation or expan-

sion in parentheses the first time they are mentioned, and then the abbreviated form can be

used thereafter:

• His research was concerned with understanding the similarities between tsunamis

(large waves caused by underwater earthquakes) and maelstroms (very large

whirlpools).

• Infinitives are discussed elsewhere in this book (see online chapter 1).

• The beach was bathed in bright moonlight (a sight that reminded me of another beach,

in another place, at another time).

• Further research, this time funded by the WHO (World Health Organization),

produced findings that were quite different. The WHO researchers based in Tokyo,

for example . . .

Code switching: the

practice of switching

between languages,

dialects or slang within the

one language to explore

and/or reinforce group

solidarity in different

communities or groups

Parentheses: a unit of

punctuation used to

separate the main material

of a sentence from

explanations, digressions,

examples, references or

abbreviations

Brackets: a unit of

punctuation used to

perform the same functions

as parentheses. Commonly

used to enclose

parentheses within

parentheses, to show

changes and comments

within quotations, and to

show quoted material from

different aspects

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Place the main sentence punctuation outside parentheses:

Parentheses can also be used with numbers and letters in lists or series:

To travel safely in that area, you are by law required to have (1) a four-wheel-drive vehicle,

(2) a winch fitted to the vehicle and (3) a two-way radio.

We were confused and upset, and didn’t know whether we should (a) stay where we were,

(b) walk along the highway or (c) try and make our way back over the hills.

Parentheses in lists can be double or single (right-handed):

(a) (B) (iii) (2.4) (§4.22)

a) B) iii) 2.4) §4.22)

Use either according to taste, but be consistent.

Brackets (or square brackets) can be used for parentheses within parentheses:

For further information, consult an authoritative source (e.g. Chambers, Mark L.

[2008] MacBook for Dummies [New York: John Wiley & Sons]).

Brackets can also be used within quotations to show changes and comments. Consider, for

example, an original passage from which you want to quote:

Brackets can be used to show quoted material from different aspects:

No Yes

She sat down at the machine, (A Compaq

Xeon D) and proceeded to show us just how

fast she could type. (120 words per minute)

She sat down at the machine (a Compaq

Xeon D), and proceeded to show us just how

fast she could type (120 words per minute).

Given the changes proposed, the best place for the Human Resources Department will be on the

twelfth floor. They will be closer to Central Administration, and they will be best placed to begin

using the new mainframe virtually on the day it is installed. We believe that all these changes can

be put in place by January 1910.

With capital letters adjusted

to fit the sentence in which

you quote it

‘[T]he best place for the Human Resources Department will

be on the twelfth floor’ is the only recommendation I would

take issue with in this report.

With explanations and

expansions

The good news in this report for our department is that

‘[the Human Resources Department] will be closer to

Central Administration, and they will be best placed to begin

using the new mainframe virtually on the day it is installed

[July 23, 2010]’.

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Note: Parentheses and brackets come in pairs. Always proofread your work to check that

you have matched an opening parenthesis or bracket with a closing one.

No: Dogs from the terriers group (such as the Jack Russell and the West Highland White —

although small in size, might not be as suitable as those from the toy group — including

breeds such as the silky terrier or the pug if you live in an apartment or flat.

Perhaps: Dogs from the terriers group — such as the Jack Russell and the West Highland

White — although small in size, might not be as suitable as those from the toy group —

including breeds such as the silky terrier or the pug — if you live in an apartment or flat.

Yes: Dogs from the terriers group (such as the Jack Russell and the West Highland White),

although small in size, might not be as suitable as those from the toy group — including

breeds such as the silky terrier or the pug — if you live in an apartment or flat.

Notice how the use of parentheses ‘seals off’ an interpolated remark in such a way that it is

easier on the eye, and less confusing, to place a comma after a closing parenthesis than after

a dash.

Correct the capitalisation and place parentheses, commas and brackets where necessary in the

following.

(a) a Number of the christian churches have been Undergoing Some Turbulent times, what with

Issues like Women’s Ordination, Declining Congregations and Sexual Misbehaviour Bedevilling

a Shell-Shocked Leadership.

(b) She jumped up and shouted, ‘you are talking nothing but nonsense, and-’ she staggered, caught

her breath, and continued,’ You will all pay for this at the Shareholders’ meeting.’

(c) ‘You are little better than a female Chauvinist,’ he hissed, ‘and a Sadistic one at that!’

(d) It seems to me that this model, in stark contrast to, the others is clearly superior.

(e) Surely by now it is obvious that Apple computers (although clearly superior technically to

Windows machines are never going to capture more than 30 per cent of the market.

(f) The main reference I have drawn upon for this paper is Henriksson, Anders (2001 Non Campus

Mentis: World History According to College Students [New York: Workman Press).

(g) I believe that the only way to go about this is to look at (a) the depreciation costs, b) the real

currency costs (taking into account deflation and exchange rates [American to Singaporean}

and [c) GST (goods and services tax (factors).

(h) It’s funny how what some now believe to be a generic concept, such as Kleenex (or tissue), in

fact once was simply a proprietary ( [brand] ) name [ i.e., kleenex] ).

(i) ‘)every right-thinking person’ is a phrase used continually throughout the pamphlet, which leads

me to believe that it is little but propaganda.

(j) When you talk of using ‘peters’ usage Book,’ you really need to specify whether you are

referring to her Australian Book (Peters, Pam [1995 The Cambridge Australian English Style

Guide [Melbourne: Cambridge University Press)] or her International Book Peters, Pam (2004[

The Cambridge Guide to English Usage Cambridge: Cambridge University [press])).

With mistakes not edited out

of the original

The report concludes, ‘We believe that these changes can be

in place by January1910 [sic].’

Sic is the Latin word for ‘thus’ or ‘so’ and is used when a

writer needs to quote the original passage without tampering

with it, even though the original has a mistake in it. It is

usually italicised.

ASSESS YOURSELF

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The dashThe dash allows for a stronger pause than the comma, and can be used to achieve a number

of purposes:

The hyphenThe hyphen, like capitalisation, can be considered as being part of punctuation or part of spelling.

Hyphens are used when words are divided between lines, usually because there is not

enough room in the line to give the word in its unbroken form. For example:

It is important when breaking a word between lines to ensure that hyphen-

ation does not cause confusion.

Many hyphenation problems are solved by using word processors, which tend to break words

cleanly between lines. With or without word processing technology, however, ensure that the

hyphen falls between naturally occurring syllables, and ensure that there are two or more letters

of the word at the end of a line and three or more letters at the beginning of a line:

Dash: a unit of punctuation

used to show abrupt

changes in tone or thought,

hesitation or suspense, to

emphasise appositives or

modifiers, and to follow an

introductory series and fi

series and explanation To show abrupt changes in tone

or thought

• He submitted his report — if we can dignify it with such

a term — three weeks late.

• They chose me — why does it always have to be me?

— to do the presentation to the board of directors.

To show hesitation or suspense • ‘I don’t know whether I should tell you about —’ she

said, turning aside.

• The final outcome was — disaster.

To emphasise appositives or

modifiers

• The focus of their deliberations — whether such a large

budget item should be approved or not — was being lost.

• The paint that they had chosen— mixed especially for

them — was ghastly.

To follow an introductory series

and final series and explanation

(single dash)

• Famine, disease, war — all of these had hit the small

country in the past three years.

• The small country had had numerous afflictions in the

past three years — famine, disease, war.

• Of the afflictions they had suffered in the past few years,

the villagers feared one above all — the bloody civil war

that would rip their country apart again.

Hyphen: a unit of

punctuation used to link

parts of a compound word

or syllables of a word.

No Yes

• hyp-henation

• hyphenati-on

• h-yphenation

hyphen-ation

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Avoid hyphenating single-syllable words. If necessary, replace the single-syllable word

with a synonym, or else change the justification of the line in which the word appears (see

chapter 2, ‘Document design and graphic communication’).

Hyphens can cause and can be used to prevent confusion:

Hyphens can be useful in reducing ambiguity, particularly with prefixes that end in the

same consonant or vowel as the word that follows it.

Prefixes such as self-, all- and quasi- usually take hyphens:

self-control all-inclusive quasi-governmental

Hyphens are also used in some compound adjectives. A compound adjective is formed when

two or more words are placed before a noun and modify that noun. When such compound

adjectives occur after a noun, rather than before it, a hyphen is not used:

Note that compound modifiers containing an adverb with an -ly ending do not usually take

a hyphen:

• upwardly mobile couple

• dangerously aggressive approach.

Confusion caused by Examples

Ambiguous end-of-line hyphenation • tee-thing

• fat-her

• he-art

• dog-ma

Confusion reduced by Before hyphen After hyphen

Adding hyphen to clarify

meaning

• coopt

• shelllike

• prooutsourcing

• antiinflationary

• reeducate

• co-opt

• shell-like

• pro-outsourcing

• anti-inflationary

• re-educate

Compound adjectives before nouns Compound adjectives after noun or pronoun

He was the author of a little-known novel.

He read the ten-page document.

Her off-the-record comments were revealing.

The novel is little known around here.

The document was ten pages long.

I will speak to you, but only off the record.

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A suspended hyphen is used in parallel compound adjectives:

Hyphens are also used with numbers, such as:

• fractions (three-quarters)

• double-digit numbers (sixty-six)

• number-word combinations (20-to-1 odds, 70-minute recording).

Correct any errors you find in the following using dashes and hyphens.

(a) We endured the presentation: believe me, ‘endured’ is the appropriate word; for all ninety-five

teeth-grinding minutes.

(b) Once we have put in all this preliminary work, then I feel sure that we will eventually gaze upon

that which motivates all of us success.

(c) We will need to relay those cables as the circuit re-lays now appear to be faulty. Can you

confirm this in a memo and relay the new schedule by email to the cable gang supervisors?

(d) I will have to reedit the whole thing, probably using one of the checkasyougo software

packages.

(e) As an after dinner-speaker, he was one of the best, but then it all depends on what you consider

to be the best use of your time after-dinner.

(f) The contrast between the before and after-training performance levels was striking.

(g) We have to ensure that, budget constraints or not, we do not allow pre-

sent circumstances to overwhelm us, with the result that we end up not

having the nerve to see the long term- reengineering program put in place.

(h) The ultra nationalists moved their militias with-the-aid-of nine-semi trailers.

(i) Please send twenty five litre cans to the work site over the next-12 hour-period.

(j) Crass jeering, stereotyping, playing to the lowest common-denominator- all of these - were part

of the antiintellectual crusade of the tabloid-media.

Quotation marksQuotation marks (or inverted commas) are used to show direct quotation — that is, when we are

faithfully reporting the direct speech or writing of others. We use indirect quotation when we

recount the words of a person (but not necessarily word for word). This process does not

require quotation marks:

The figures showed a clear contrast between

pre- and post-war inflation rates.

The first- and second-quarter figures were

not impressive.

ASSESS YOURSELF

Quotation marks: a unit of

punctuation consisting of

superscript marks, either

single or double, that occur

in pairs. Used to show

material that is quoted

verbatim from a person or

or unusual meanings Direct quotation Indirect quotation

‘I’m just not getting the productivity out of

these machines that I expected,’ Maria

observed.

Maria said that she was just not getting the

productivity out of those machines that she

expected.

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There are two types of quotation marks: double quotation marks (“ ") and single quotation

marks (‘ ’). Usage varies considerably, but there is no compelling reason to choose one over the

other for basic punctuation. Choose one style, but then use it consistently to avoid confusion.

The two types of marks can be useful for showing quotations within quotations:

Quoted material: short and long By convention, quotation marks are used only for short quotations. But what is short? How

long is a piece of string? Over time, these conventions have developed:

Here are some examples of approaches to short and long quotations:

One expert sums it up thus: ‘The greenhouse effect could be substantially slowed if people

simply walked, used bicycles, or drove electric cars.’ (short quotation)

One expert sums it up thus:

The greenhouse effect could be substantially slowed if people simply walked, used

bicycles, or drove electric cars. Electric vehicles powered from fossil-fuel-burning

power plants are not necessarily a solution, of course, but if solar panels are installed

on domestic garage roofs, then solar power can be collected throughout the day and

stored in batteries, to be transferred to cars overnight. (longer quotation)

Quotation marks and other punctuation When using quotation marks, where do we place other punctuation marks? Conventions vary

throughout the English-speaking world:

Quotation within quotation: style 1 Quotation within quotation: style 2

Mary whispered, “Did you notice that he said ‘some

departments will be exempt from these cutbacks’?”

Mary whispered, ‘Did you notice that he said “some

departments will be exempt from these cutbacks”?’

Quoting

• Poetry: one or two lines

• Prose: Less than 30 or 40 words

Quoting

• Poetry: three or more lines

• Prose: More than 30 or 40 words

Incorporate quoted material into sentence, setting off

words with quotation marks

Do not use quotation marks; lead into the quote with a

colon, and indent (and possibly italicise) the text.

British, Australian usage: punctuation marks

tend to fall outside quotation marks

American usage: punctuation marks tend to

fall inside quotation marks

‘She is just a damned nuisance’, he

whispered harshly.

‘She is just a damned nuisance,’ he

whispered harshly.

‘It’s over there’, he responded. It’s over there,’ he responded.

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Exceptions to this include sentences containing quoted material whose punctuation is

integral to its meaning:

I smell a rat, and when he talks about ‘helping others because it simply feels good to do so’,

I immediately think of the question the cynical Romans would ask in situations like this —

‘Cui Bono?’ (who profits?).

The sergeant yelled ‘Stop!’, but none of us had any intention of stopping.

Scare quotes Quotation marks can also be used as scare quotes. Scare quotes are used to suggest:

Be careful about over-using scare quotes. Like sign writers who use quotes around the

most ordinary words and phrases, we can easily devalue the tools we have for emphasis by

emphasising the unremarkable (the same can be said for exclamation marks and capital

letters). This is particularly true if we use scare quotes around terms that have passed into

common usage.

Note that some people use ‘air quotes’; that is, while speaking they gesture with the first

and second fingers of each hand as a body language mimic of scare quotes.

Ellipsis Ellipsis marks (three full stops) are used to indicate that matter has been removed from a

sentence or larger unit of text. This is done to shorten and/or to emphasise certain words or

word groupings.

For example, consider this passage:

Unusual or slang usage, which the writer is

either drawing attention to or is

uncomfortable with

• You might thus well qualify for ‘special

consideration’ under the wording of the

Act.

• On Friday, everyone around here has a

sneaky little custom known as ‘long lunch’.

Irony or sarcasm • I doubt whether ‘realistic leather-look

upholstery’ is quite what we are looking

for.

• Watch out he doesn’t give you his ‘special

treatment’.

Ellipsis: a unit of

punctuation consisting of

three full stops used to

show deletion of material in

a sentence, interruption or

suspense

Given the changes proposed, the best place for the Human Resources Department will be on the

twelfth floor. They will be closer to Central Administration, and they will be best placed to begin

using the new mainframe virtually on the day it is to be installed. We believe that all these

changes can be put in place by January, 2010. This will prove helpful, as Human Resources need

to improve their performance drastically. Their figures in the past twelve months, even allowing

for the chaos of staff turnover, could not be worse, and things need to get better very quickly if

heads are not to roll.

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Using this source as a guide, note the following suggestions about ellipses:

Correct any errors you find in the following using quotation marks and ellipses.

(a) My boss shouted ‘he expected better things from you and others with your experience.’

(b) She said, ‘Do you want to come and see the new Star ‘Wars’ movie’?

(c) George Bernard Shaw referred to dancing as ‘The vertical expression of a horizontal intent set

to music. and I think that there is a lot of truth in that.

(d) Have you read Albee’s script of ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

(e) I find young people’s music rather ‘groovy’ and ‘funky’, especially by bands that feature ‘bass’

guitar, don’t you, ‘baby’?

(f) I find it ironic that when para-military groups are successful, history refers to them as freedom

fighters, but when they are unsuccessful history refers to them as terrorists.

(g) Hitting the golf ball, Rick said, ‘Things were going so well, and then suddenly Deirdre bursts into

the boardroom and virtually screams ‘no documents get signed around here without me being a

part of it’ ‘ !

(h) Hamlet shows that he is an incurable optimist, believing that the choices in life are always

between two positive pathways, when he makes his famous ‘To be or . . . to be, that is the

question’ speech.

(i) The main thing I got out of the report was this section here: ‘no staff member, past or present . . .

may make retrospective claims on the superannuation fund.

(j) ‘Go now’! was all he said, so we went.

SpellingEnglish spelling can present problems for writers, even for those who are born into English-

speaking cultures. Other languages, such as Italian or Korean, by comparison are quite phon-

etic (i.e. most letters are pronounced, and most letters are pronounced in a consistent way).

There are a number of letters in English that are not pronounced or pronounced differently in

certain words. This pattern of irregularity affects only about 25 per cent of English words, but

within that 25 per cent are 400 or so of the most frequently used words (Crystal 2003).

Use ellipsis to indicate deletion of material. • Look what he says in this paragraph: ‘Their

figures in the past twelve months . . . could

not be worse.’

Use ellipsis to indicate interruption or

suspense (compare the use of the dash —

p. 19).

• He had just got up to reading the bit about

‘Their figures . . . could not be worse . . .’

when the phone went dead.

• I leave it to your imagination about just

whose heads are going to roll . . .

Do not use ellipsis to distort meaning in the

source passage.

• My previous employer in fact stated in a

memo that ‘[My department’s] figures in

the past twelve months, even allowing for

the chaos of staff turnover, could not be . . .

better . . . ’

ASSESS YOURSELF

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People who have difficulty spelling might draw little comfort from the fact that, had they

lived prior to the eighteenth century, their ‘poor’ spelling might have gone unnoticed. Up

until that time, there was considerable flexibility in the way people spelt words. Shakespeare,

for example, spelt his own name in several different ways, and did not think that this was

remarkable. The invention of dictionaries in the eighteenth century ‘froze’ the language.

Thereafter, a line was drawn between ‘correct’ and ‘incorrect’ spelling.

So much for history. What about your survival as a speller today?

Spelling errors: where do they come from? There are other causes of spelling error apart from the irregularities of the language itself:

• Sometimes people misspell because they do not understand the parts of speech or word

classes: for example, they might mistake the verb advise for the noun advice.

• Sometimes people misspell because of mispronunciation. If, over a long period of time,

enough people say goverment instead of government, or enviroment instead of environment,

then the words may eventually be spelled that way.

• Sometimes people misspell because they have made typing errors, or in taking notes by

hand they have been scribbling, and have left out letters or added letters, even though they

are usually quite good spellers. Typing errors that occur when people are using word pro-

cessing programs on computers can be partly corrected by computerised spellcheckers; but

be warned: spellcheckers are far from perfect, and are not a replacement for the hard grind

of improving your spelling.

• Sometimes, however, people misspell because of vocabulary problems; they simply do not

understand the correct meaning of a word, and have mistaken it for another word. We will

consider a number of these vocabulary problems soon.

In order to avoid making such errors in spelling and/or vocabulary, we need to get a sys-

tematic overview of how such errors occur, how we can identify them, and how we can pre-

vent them happening.

Let’s explore the mechanics of some of these problems.

Eggcorns, mondegreens, malapropisms, homonyms, contranyms and the other usual suspects: beware!Eggcorns are a type of language error, usually based upon a mishearing of the original word

or words (Liberman & Pullum 2006; ‘Eggcorns’ 2006), sometimes leading to unintentionally

hilarious effects, but which still make sense at some level.

(continued)

Eggcorn Original meaning

Lame man’s terms Layman’s terms

Kill over and die Keel over and die

Cutting off your nose despite your face Cutting off your nose to spite your face

In high dungeon In high dudgeon

With flying collars With flying colours

To name a view To name a few

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Sources: ‘Eggcorns’ (2006); Liberman and Pullum (2006); The Eggcorn Database (2005).

Eggcorns are close relatives of mondegreens and malapropisms. A mondegreen is a word or

word group based upon a mishearing of texts such as poetry or music, so that the Scottish

ballad The Bonnie Earl O’Murray’s final lines ‘They hae slain the Earl Amurray/and laid him

on the green’ was misheard as ‘Lady Mondegreen’ (Wines 2007; Wright 1954).

A malapropism is named after a character — Mrs Malaprop — from the 1775 play The

Rivals, by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, where words are comically mispronounced. Thus Mrs

Malaprop announces at one point:

If I reprehend [i.e. apprehend] any thing in this world, it is the use of my oracular [i.e.

vernacular] tongue, and a nice derangement [i.e. arrangement] of epitaphs! [i.e. epithets].

Act 3, Scene 3.

Other malapropisms are also used to humorous effect in modern television programs,

usually to show — as with the original character — that the person uttering the lines is not

terribly bright, and thus is an object of ridicule for us, the audience:

Don’t let your audience — your reader, or for that matter, your listener — draw similar conclu-

sions. As with spelling (and the two categories overlap), don’t let your vocabulary let you down

by leading you into usage traps. Use print and online dictionaries and thesauri to check your

meanings, and you will garner respect, admiration, and perhaps even promotion. Perfect

spelling, vocabulary, usage, grammar, punctuation and style do not necessarily correlate per-

fectly with intelligence and competence, but most people infer that they do. Perception is reality.

Beware also of other word groups and phrase groups that can cause you spelling and

vocabulary problems. These words exemplify differences in spelling, pronunciation and

meaning. Also be aware that there is some confusion, or at least disagreement, as to what to

actually call the different types of word groups and phrase groups that can lead to error.

Giga counter Geiger counter

In times of trial, we must rest on the pillows

of our faith.

In times of trial, we must rest on the pillars of

our faith.

Eggcorn:error, usually based upon a

mishearing of the original

word or words sometimes

leading to unintentionally

hilarious effects, but which

still make sense at some

level

Mondegreen: a word or

word group based upon a

mishearing of texts such as

poetry or music

Malapropism: a type of

language error where

words are comically

mispronounced and/or

ideas are confused

Television program Malapropism Original meaning

Kath and Kim ‘I want to be effluent mum!’,

‘You are effluent Kimi . . .’

Affluent

The Sopranos ‘Revenge is like serving cold

cuts’ . . .

Revenge is a dish best served

cold — proverb

‘prostate with grief’ Prostrate

‘Quasimodo predicted this’ Nostradamus

‘Create a little dysentery

among the ranks.’

Dissent

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In other words, just to make your spelling and vocabulary problems even more annoying,

even the experts — the dictionary writers — cannot always agree on how to classify the error

patterns behind the word/phrase groups, and classification is the first step to understanding.

And so we have not just confusion, but confusion about confusion.

But don’t be deterred: such confusion, at however many levels, reveals so much about the

way English works (and doesn’t work), and may stimulate you to think about why one word

or the spelling of one word is correct, and why another is not.

Homonyms, for example, are words that have the same spelling and the same pronun-

ciation but have different meanings. While they are of interest to us, particularly in terms of

parts of speech or word class tables or matrices (see online chapter 1), they do not cause too

many problems for writers and speakers, primarily because the syntax of sentences will prob-

ably prevent confusion. Thus, to ‘effect an effect’ or ‘affect the affect’ may sound strange, but

they do have meaning. Problems usually arise when different words in the same category

become confusables.

Homophones are words that have different spellings and meanings but the same pronun-

ciation. A spellchecker will not save you if you confuse homophones, as the checker simply

checks to see if the word exists, and then will approve it — even if is the wrong word in

context. The only way to beat the homophone trap is to read widely, and to learn the

differences.

In the 2 × 2 array or matrix of table 2.11, we have just considered three categories of defi-

nitions that exist in dictionaries. And, while dictionaries do not always agree on precise

Same spelling Different spelling

Same pronunciation Effect (verb, noun)

Affect (verb, noun)

Stern (adjective, noun)

Quail (verb, noun)

Fair (noun, adjective)

Water (noun, verb)

Slap (noun, verb)

Out (adverb, adjective, interjection,

noun, preposition, verb)

Altar/alter

Site/cite/sight

Bow/bough

Assent/ascent

To/two/too

Awe/oar/or/ore

Right/rite/write/wright

Vein/vane/vain

Different

pronunciation

Tear (drop, rip)

Bow (tie, ribbon, weapon/bend

knee, body, incline head)

Desert (verb, noun)

Permit (allow, pass/licence)

Wind (verb, noun)

Bass (fish, voice/instrument)

Convict (verb, noun)

Eggcorns

Mondegreens

Malapropisms

Confusables

Howlers

Bloopers

Parapraxes

Table 2.11: Analysis of problematic words and phrases

Homonyms

Homophones

Heteronyms

Heteromorphs

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meanings (consult them on homograph, heterophone, polyseme, paronym and capitograph,

for example), the spelling and pronunciation dichotomy helps us to analyse differences.

Now consider the fourth quadrant in table 2.11 of different spelling/different pronun-

ciation? Strictly speaking, such a category could apply to any two dissimilar words in the

language, and would be so large as to be meaningless. It is only by meaning that we could

group such problematic words and phrases, and it is usually not meaning but misunderstood

meaning that makes the different spelling/different pronunciation quadrant worthy of

investigation.

Unfortunately, there is no term to clearly classify this concept of misunderstood meaning, as

in the case of the conventionally defined terms of homonym, homophone and heteronym. So, I

will borrow one from a different field of study — heteromorph. This ‘new’ term encompasses a

number of word mistakes — eggcorns, mondegreens, malapropisms, confusables, howlers,

bloopers, and parapraxes. Whether the category makes sense remains to be seen, but at least it

contains patterns and examples that are useful, and give us models of what not to write or say.

We already know about eggcorns, mondegreens and malapropisms, but what of confusa-

bles, howlers, bloopers, and parapraxes?

Confusables (sometimes spelled, perhaps as some type of self-referential joke, confusibles)

are words and phrases that writers and speakers get wrong (Urdang 1988; Room 2000; Glatzer

2004; Dowling 2006).

Room (2000) finds that certain words are confused because of particular similarities, such

as:

• shared elements (syllables, stress patterns) — militate/mitigate

• transposable or exchangeable elements — calvary/cavalry, accept/except

• words mistaken for phrases and vice versa — all ready/already

• semantic proximity — baroque/rococo, nadir/zenith, acid/alkali

• uncertainty arising from different uses in different varieties of English — biscuit (British

usage), cookie (American usage).

Howlers and bloopers are, in fact, an example of different varieties of English describing

the same thing — in this case, usually blunders in student essays or exams and in the media.

‘Howlers’ tend to be of the British usage provenance (also sometimes known as ‘clangers’),

while ‘bloopers’ tend to be American usage. Howlers/clangers and bloopers are examples of

writers and speakers demonstrating a very poor grasp of the material (fact, vocabulary, ter-

minology, and spelling). The howling involved is usually that of the intense anguished

laughter of lecturers, tutors, teachers and instructors marking documents that students have

submitted. The same students might be howling, but not with laughter, when they see what

the consequences are for their marks or grades.

Here are some examples:

Magna Carta provided that no free man should be hanged twice for the same offense.

People performed morality plays, about ghosts, goblins, and other mythical creatures.

In midevil times most of the people were alliterate. The greatest writer of the time was

Chaucer, who wrote many poems and verses and also wrote literature. Another tale tells of

William Tell, who shot an arrow through an apple while standing on his son’s head.

The Renaissance was an age in which more individuals felt the value of their human being.

Martin Luther was nailed to the church door at Wittenberg for selling papal indulgences.

He died a horrible death, being excommunicated by a bull.

It was the sculptor Donatello’s interest in the female nude that made him the father of the

Renaissance. It was an age of great inventions and discoveries. Gutenberg invented the

Bible and removable type. Sir Walter Raleigh discovered cigarettes and started smoking.

And Sir Francis Drake circumcised the world with a 100-foot clipper.

(Lederer 1997; Lederer 1996)

Homonym: words that have

the same spelling and the

same pronunciation but

have different meanings

Homophone: words that

have different spellings and

meanings but the same

pronunciation

Heteronym: words which

have the same spelling, but

have different

pronunciations and

meanings

Heteromorph: words and

phrases that have different

spelling and/or different

pronunciation, but which

in some manner

Confusables: words and

phrases that writers and

speakers get wrong

Howlers: examples of

writers and speakers

having a very poor grasp of

the material (fact,

vocabulary, terminology,

and spelling) that they are

meant to be demonstrating

mastery of (British usage)

Bloopers: examples of

writers and speakers

having a very poor grasp of

the material (fact,

vocabulary, terminology,

and spelling) that they are

meant to be demonstrating

mastery of (US usage)

Parapraxes: speech and/or

actions which reveal

unconscious thoughts,

which are often sexual in

nature

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The early Britons made their houses of mud, and there was rough mating on the floor.

This packet of ready-made pastry will make enough for four persons or twelve tarts.

(King 2005)

Rome was overthrown by invasions of the Huns, Visigoths and Osteopaths.

Solomon had 300 wives and 700 cucumbers.

Coal is decayed vegetarians.

As he walked through the room he heard the sound of heavy breeding.

(McGreevy 2007)

Parapraxes are also known as Freudian slips or slips of the tongue (Jamison 2007; Erard

2007; Reason 2000; Larocque 2000; Harley 2006). They are named after the Austrian psy-

choanalyst, Sigmund Freud (1856–1939), who coined the term. Freud argued that sometimes

our speech and/or actions reveal unconscious thoughts, which are often sexual in nature

(Jamison compares the phenomenon to that of non-verbal or body language ‘leakage’ or lack

of congruence: see chapter 8, ‘Non-verbal communication’, p. 261, and chapter 9, ‘Interper-

sonal communication 1’, pp. 291–5). Example of parapraxes:

‘I declare this Department of Cynical — er, I mean Clinical — Psychology open’

(British politician opening a department of clinical psychology).

‘A Freudian slip is like saying one thing, but meaning your mother’ (pun).

Jamison (2007) argues that slips of the tongue by US President George W Bush and his

colleagues revealed foreign policy intentions that were different from those publicly stated.

Numerous sites on the internet give examples of ‘Freudian typos’, or typing errors that have

sexual overtones. Reason (2000) suggests that there are often more commonplace cognitive

processing reasons explaining why people do and say the things they do, but concedes that

the concept is an interesting one.

We will shortly consider a list of vocabulary and usage problem words and phrases, but, as

a final warning about the ambiguity or treacherousness of English, let’s briefly consider the

contranym or autoantonym. A contranym is a word that can be its own antonym, or in other

words can have two diametrically opposed meanings, depending on the context. The different

meanings sometimes arise because, at some stage in the past, the words were actually

different spelling or pronunciation, and meaning different things. Over time, the spellings

and/or pronunciations changed. These are all useful words, but make sure that if you put one

in a sentence that the syntax and phrasing make it clear that only meaning is being used.

Contranym Different meanings

Oversight close supervision

ignoring something important

Moot something not worth arguing about

an arguable point

Contranym: a word that can

have two diametrically

opposed meanings

Table 2.12: Contranyms or autoantonyms

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1. Use print and internet resources to compile lists of homonyms, homophones, heteronyms and

the various possible types of heteromorphs.

2. Create sentences that use at least two types of the one category, taking care to ensure that no

ambiguity or misunderstanding is caused.

3. Create sentences that use at least two types of the one category, and then ensure that there is,

in fact, ambiguity or misunderstanding. Briefly speculate on how these errors could be avoided.

4. Using print and internet sources, find at least four other contranyms.

5. After finding your contranyms, place the them in pairs and in sentences that clearly show their

distinct meanings.

Spelling: the rulesLet’s now consider some basic rules that can help you predict English spelling.

Suffixes

Suffixes are word endings. They are important when words change form: for example, when

the adjective loud changes to the adverb loudly, or when the noun noise changes to the

adjective noisy or the adverb noisily.

Contranym Different meanings

Sanction endorse, approve

disapprove, punish

Inflammable liable to catch fire

not liable to catch fire

Citation an honour, award or commendation

a summons to appear in court; written notice of traffic violation

Table to put forward for discussion (british usage)

to postpone discussion on (american usage)

Scan to read carefully

to skim over

Cleave to separate (cleaver, cleavage, cleft palate)

to bring together (cleave to my principles/wife/the past)

Table 2.12 (continued)

ASSESS YOURSELF

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Final eDrop the e if adding a suffix beginning with a vowel:

move + able = movable

force + ible = forcible

impede + ance = impedance

love + ing = loving

Retain the e if adding a suffix beginning with a consonant:

reinforce + ment = reinforcement

passionate + ly = passionately

care + ful = careful

shape + less = shapeless

The final e is kept in some cases to prevent ambiguity and mispronunciation. For example,

when someone is close to death, they are dying. When someone is changing the colour of

fabrics with dyes, they are dyeing. Retaining the e thus prevents confusion of the two mean-

ings. When a c or g is followed by an e (sage, page, mace, practice), the consonants stay soft

(i.e. are pronounced j and s). When the e is removed, these consonants become hard

(sagacious, pagan, macaroni, practicable). To prevent this hardening occurring, some c and g

words retain the e:

outrageous manageable noticeable irreplaceable

Final yWhen a word ends in y, change the y to i when it follows a consonant:

ally ➞ allies

happy ➞ happiest

try ➞ tries

rely ➞ relies

sixty ➞ sixtieth

Exception: when the suffix is -ing:

relying ➞ trying

The y is retained, however, when it follows a vowel:

display ➞ displayed

play ➞ playing

Doubling final consonantsWords with final consonants sometimes double such consonants. Pronunciation of the word

in its unchanged and changed forms has an influence on whether this occurs or not. For

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example, if a one-syllable word has a single vowel before the final consonant, then the final

consonant is doubled:

ship ➞ shipping

shop ➞ shopping

mat ➞ matting

sob ➞ sobbing

However, if two vowels, or a vowel and another consonant, precede the final consonant,

then this doubling does not occur:

book ➞ booking

pain ➞ pained

depart ➞ departing

mark ➞ marked

In words of more than one syllable, doubling occurs if a single vowel precedes the final

consonant, and if the final syllable of the word is pronounced when a suffix is added:

control ➞ controlled

prefer ➞ preferring

permit ➞ permitted

In words of more than two syllables, doubling does not occur if two vowels, or a vowel and

another consonant, precede the final consonant:

contain ➞ containing

consent ➞ consenting

PluralsMost nouns change from singular to plural simply by adding an s:

dog ➞ dogs

battleship ➞ battleships

Some nouns, however, already end in s, or else end in ch, sh, x or z. In these cases, the

plural is formed by the addition of es:

circus ➞ circuses

beach ➞ beaches

sash ➞ sashes

box ➞ boxes

topaz ➞ topazes

This also pertains to verbs with such endings when they change to third person singular

form:

I reach he reaches you finish she finishes we tax he taxes

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Some words ending in o also require an es plural form:

potato ➞ potatoes

zero ➞ zeroes

buffalo ➞ buffaloes

Most nouns ending in f change to ves in the plural:

loaf ➞ loaves

calf ➞ calves

shelf ➞ shelves

Exceptions:

belief ➞ beliefs

safe ➞ safes

Nouns ending in y preceded by a consonant form plurals by dropping the y and taking on

ies; verbs ending in the same way form their third person singular forms in the same way:

money ➞ monies

pony ➞ ponies

reality ➞ realities

bury ➞ buries

worry ➞ worries

Nouns ending in y preceded by vowels form plurals by adding s; verbs ending in the same

way form their third person singular forms in the same way:

bay ➞ bays

toy ➞ toys

betray ➞ betrays

buy ➞ buys

Some words borrowed from other languages — Latin, Greek, Italian and French, in particular

— usually form plurals as they did in the original language:

radius ➞ radii

datum ➞ data

analysis ➞ analyses

appendix ➞ appendices

bureau ➞ bureaux

criterion ➞ criteria

ie and eiFor most words with these letter pairs, remember the rhyme:

I before e,

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Except after c,

Or when sounded like ay,

As in neighbour and weigh.

Note these examples and exceptions:

Global English: American versus British spellingYou should be aware that English spellings vary according to where the writer comes from.

The biggest division in usage is between British and American spellings. There is a long tra-

dition in America, starting with scholars such as Noah Webster, of changing or reforming

British spellings for various reasons (Blake 1996).

There are, of course, substantial differences between these two language groups in terms of

vocabulary: braces/suspenders, nappy/diaper, vest/undershirt, waistcoat/vest, lorry/truck,

Autumn/Fall, aluminium/aluminum, and so on (Crystal 2003).

Accordingly, dictionaries and computerised spelling checkers will reflect their origins in the

spellings they give as ‘correct’.

I before e belief, relief, thief, chief, hygiene, piece, friend

Except after c receipt, deceit, conceit, perceive, ceiling

Or when sounded like ay neighbour, weigh, vein, sleigh, eight, beige

Exceptions either, neither, foreign, forfeit, height, leisure, seize, sleight, weird

British American

-our colour, labour -or color, labor

-ae, -oe encyclopaedia, foetus -e encyclopedia, fetus

-que cheque -ck check

-em empanel -im impanel

-en enquiry -in inquiry

-c disc -k disk

-re centre, metre -er center, meter

-e acknowledgement -e omitted acknowledgment

-ll travelled -l traveled

-ise/ize organisation/organization,

realise/realize

-ize organization, realize

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As we move towards a more global English in the twenty-first century, however, historical

research is showing us that it is not always as simple as it seems to characterise spellings as

being ‘American’ or otherwise. Some British-area language traditionalists sometimes find it

irritating to contemplate ‘American’ spellings such as ‘center’ rather than ‘centre’, or ‘theater’

rather than ‘theatre’, or ‘gray’ rather than ‘grey’, but in fact many of these ‘Americanisms’

were in fact the preferred spellings at the time of Shakespeare, as any reading of original

texts from that time will show.

Many people migrating to the ‘new world’ of America from the ‘old world’ of England took

such spelling, and vocabulary choices, with them. Thus changes often occurred in England,

while ‘traditional’ usage was kept in America. There was an emphasis, for example, in

eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British dictionaries to adopt French usage, which accounts

for some of the later, twentieth-century differences in usage between the United States and the

United Kingdom. This also accounts for why the -ize suffix is just as ‘non-American’ as the

‘-ise’ suffix, as even the Oxford Dictionary attests.

Language, in other words, is often influenced by politics and history as much as ‘pure’ lin-

guistics. There is a long tradition, going back to 1066, of seeing French and other Latin-

derived usage as more sophisticated than Anglo-Saxon usage, which perhaps accounts for

numerous modern-day American drama companies spelling their premises’ names as ‘theatres’

rather than ‘theaters’. Such preferences also have real present-day implications for readability

and plain English (see online chapters 3 and 4).

Also, Americans today buy computer disks but put compact discs in their stereos. This is

primarily because Philips, the Dutch company that invented and named the compact disc or

CD format, chose a British spelling for the new technology.

Australian usage tends to follow British rather than American usage, and there are few

uniquely Australian style patterns. The Macquarie Dictionary notes that the -ise suffix is

perhaps the most distinctively Australian spelling practice (Macquarie Dictionary 2001, p. xii).

Spelling reform: the impossible dream?There have been many attempts throughout the history of the English language to rationalise

it, making it more or even totally phonetic. While such reform efforts seem to have common

sense on their side, the sheer success of English in becoming a global language, together with

the conflict between orthography (spelling) and phonology (pronunciation), make such

reforms unlikely. As Bryson points out, if we decide to standardise the spelling of words,

whose pronunciation shall we use?

When looked at globally, most of our spellings cater to a wide variation of pronunciations. If

we insisted on strictly phonetic renderings, girl would be gurl in most of America (though

perhaps goil in New York), gel in London and Sydney, gull in Ireland, gill in South Africa,

gairull in Scotland. Written communications between nations, and even parts of nations,

would become practically impossible. (Bryson 2001, p. 133)

Thus, we are probably stuck with the inanities of four/fourteen/forty and debt and island

(with the b and s inserted by 17th century scholars who were trying to copy what they imag-

ined to be more prestigious Latin spellings).

Unfortunately, there is no other way of learning English spelling than by reading as widely

as possible (and even then, by not trusting everything that you read). Use, but do not depend

upon, software spell checkers that simply use a dumb algorithm that looks at its own dic-

tionary, and that then tells you if the word exists, not if it is the right word. Spell checkers,

at their current stage of development, cannot read context — only you can do that. We will

shortly look at vocabulary and usage, and we will see that, unless we understand the differ-

ences that emerge from context, we will be let down by spell checkers.

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But does spelling really matter? Yes, it does. As Buerger remarked in prehistoric (in com-

puter terms) 1988, on the mixed blessings of staff downsizing and email:

One obvious problem (with email) is poor grammar and spelling. Email advocates love to

push the benefits of direct communication. Managers send and receive messages on a

one-to-one basis. Now that secretaries don’t fix their sloppy writing, the whole world

wonders how they passed English 1A. (Buerger 1988, p. 17)

Snobbish? Possibly. Unfair? Perhaps. But that’s the way the world works, and you should

make the system — bearing in mind Butler’s comments (online chapter 1) — work for you,

rather than against you.

Quite a few email programs do not have reliable spelling or grammar checkers. So, it is

very easy to make typographical errors in emails. Either compose your text in a word pro-

cessor, check and then copy and paste into the email program, or compose in the email pro-

gram, copy and then paste into a word processor to check for errors. Be very wary of using

free, cheap or minimal-feature word processors. Limited as these spelling and grammar

checking tools are, they have their uses. This is also particularly relevant if you are accessing

your email remotely via programs that have no checking or formatting capabilities. In this

situation, it is also worthwhile to spell- and grammar-check your emails in a program that

has these features.

Vocabulary and usage There are many words, phrases and concepts that present problems for us. Sometimes words

are confused because they are homophones (i.e. they sound the same but are spelt differently

and mean different things) or near-homophones. Other problems arise when a single word

means different things in different contexts, when words are used wrongly because of

misunderstandings about their original meanings, and because of breakdowns in syntax or

sentence structure.

Here are some of these problem words and phrases.

accede/exceedAccede (verb): to agree to something, to give consent. It can also mean to assume or take on

an office or a position.

After her fourth telephone call, I acceded to her request.

The heir-apparent acceded to the throne in 1835.

Exceed (verb): to be greater than; to go beyond the limits of.

The police officer said that I had been exceeding the speed limit.

adverse/averseAdverse (adjective): negative; antagonistic.

His work attracted a lot of adverse criticism.

Averse (adjective): opposed to, avoiding.

They were averse to taking any more risks on the project.

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advice/adviseAdvice (noun): counsel, opinion or information.

I gave him the benefit of my advice on the matter.

Advise (verb): to give advice, counsel.

Can you advise me on this matter?

affect/effectAffect (verb): to have an influence on, to put on a false show, to simulate.

The alcohol affected his ability to drive.

He affected an American accent.

Effect (verb): to bring about, accomplish.

They effected their escape under cover of darkness.

Effect (noun): result.

The rain had the effect of eroding the soil.

all ready/alreadyAlready (adverb): By this or a specified time, before, so soon.

He was already there.

Are you leaving already?

All ready (adjectival phrase): to have everything prepared.

We were all ready for the announcement when it was made.

anticipate/expectAnticipate (verb): to foresee, to act in advance of so as to prevent.

I anticipated their strategy, and took appropriate counter-measures before they even

arrived.

Expect (verb): to look forward to the likely occurrence or appearance of someone or

something.

I expect them here by 10 o’clock.

apprise/appraiseApprise (verb): to inform.

He apprised us of our rights.

Appraise (verb): to evaluate, to estimate.

He appraised the market value of our house for us.

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because/as/sinceBecause (conjunction): for the reason that.

Because I hired Jack, Mary won’t speak to me.

I hired Jack because Mary was transferring to another city.

As (conjunction): to the same degree that; while, when, during; for the reason that.

She was late as usual.

Since (conjunction): between now and the past time when, in view of the fact, because.

He’s been gone since 10 o’clock.

As and since can have causal meanings identical with that of because. Ambiguities may

arise when this causal sense is used, but the context may suggest a time sense (as = during;

since = between now and the past time when):

Since I hired Jack, Mary won’t speak to me.

(a statement of time rather than reason or cause)

I hired Jack as Mary was transferring to another city.

(a statement about simultaneous events rather than a statement of reason or cause)

Compare also although/while.

bought/broughtBought: past tense and past participle of verb to buy.

She bought the flowers at the shop on the corner.

Brought: past tense and past participle of verb to bring.

She brought the flowers to the hospital.

byBy can have numerous meanings, but confusion can arise over the meanings ‘no later than’

(preposition), ‘through the action or agency of’ (preposition), and ‘near to, alongside’ (adverb).

For example:

The survivors were discovered by a giant cactus.

Also, some grammar checkers will recommend that this sentence . . .

Much of this work should be completed by the end of 2007.

. . . be recast as:

The end of 2007 should complete much of this work.

This wrong reading is due to checkers reading the first sentence as being in passive voice,

with ‘by’ identifying the sentence subject as ‘the end of 2007’ (see online chapter 1).

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comparison, falseCheck to ensure that properties or things of people or things are matched to properties or

things of other people or things, rather than simply with other people or things.

New Zealand has had a consistently higher growth rate than Singapore. No

New Zealand has had a consistently higher growth rate than Singapore’s/Singapore’s

growth rate/ that of Singapore. Yes

compliment/complementCompliment (noun): an expression of praise, admiration or congratulation.

He paid her the compliment of saying that she was the best in the class.

Compliment (verb): to praise or flatter.

She complimented him on his skiing skills.

Complement (noun): something that completes, makes up a whole, or brings to perfection.

We have a full complement of officers on this carrier.

Complement (verb): to complete.

That corsage complemented her gown and her complexion perfectly.

comprise/consist/compose/includeComprise (transitive verb; active voice): to consist of or be composed of, and relates to all of

the parts of a whole.

A pack of cards comprises 52 cards

. . . as a pack of cards = whole = subject; 52 cards = parts = object; therefore the whole

comprises the parts.

This sentence is also correct (note passive voice) . . .

A pack of cards is composed of 52 cards.

. . . as the parts compose or constitute the whole.

However, using include in the sentence . . .

A pack of cards includes 52 cards.

. . . implies that there is something more to be considered, rather than the totality of what is

being described.

Similarly, some object to the passive voice construction of:

A pack of cards is comprised of 52 cards.

One of the traditional arguments is that comprise means the same thing as consists (of),

and thus it would be absurd to write ‘a pack of cards is consisted of 52 cards’.

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In spite of this, the passive usage has become more widespread, and a plethora of opinions

— many mutually contradictory — can be found in usage texts and on websites. If you know

that you are writing for an audience (even an audience of one) who holds strong traditional

views, don’t use ‘comprise’ in the passive. Alternately, you might simply avoid the problem

and use phrases such as ‘made up of’.

counsel/councilCounsel (noun): advice, lawyer.

The counsel for the defence rose to speak.

Counsel (verb): to give advice.

I can’t counsel you in this matter.

Council (noun): a group of people elected or chosen to make decisions and conduct

discussions.

City Council sits the first Monday of every month.

criterion/criteriaCriterion (noun): a standard, rule or test on which a judgement or decision can be based.

Criteria is the Greek plural, and thus it is incorrect to say:

Experience in the field is the sole criteria we are considering for this job.

Compare with other Latin and Greek plurals, such as media, phenomena and fungi.

disinterested/uninterestedDisinterested (adjective): neutral; unbiased, not personally involved.

The fact that the judge personally knew two of the defendants made you wonder just how

disinterested he really was.

Uninterested (adjective): lacking an interest in, bored.

Celeste was utterly uninterested in horse racing, and would yawn loudly whenever the

brothers began to discuss it.

The distinction is made harder to sustain because the noun uninterest is less well known

than the noun disinterest, and disinterest may sound more emphatic to some ears.

dependent/dependant Dependant (noun): someone who depends on another, especially for financial support.

Dependent (adjective): contingent on or relying on something or someone else.

Her three surviving dependants were dependent upon the provisions of her will.

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elicit/illicitElicit (transitive verb): to draw out, extract or obtain.

He elicited an opinion from her.

Illicit (adjective): unlawful.

They discovered an illicit whisky still in the barn.

enormity/enormousness/immensityEnormity (noun): morally outrageous action, hugeness of size, scope

Enormousness/immensity (nouns): greatness of size.

The enormity of the violence they had committed was breathtaking.

The enormousness/immensity of the building was astonishing.

ferment/fomentFerment (verb): to induce the chemical reaction of fermentation; to make turbulent.

Also a noun: a state of ferment.

Foment (verb): to incite.

The ferment of anti-government sentiment was such that it was easy for rabble-rousers to

foment street violence.

fewer/lessFewer (adjective; comparative form of few): a smaller number of; relates to count nouns.

The shop sold ice-creams on sticks and in cones, but had fewer and fewer to sell as the

day warmed up.

Less (adjective; comparative form of little): a smaller quantity of, relates to mass nouns.

She served ice-cream from the tub, and as the dinner party progressed, there was less and

less that could be salvaged for any late-comers.

flaunt/floutFlout (verb): to show contempt for.

She flouted all the conventions of good taste by behaving in that way.

Flaunt (verb): to exhibit ostentatiously.

She flaunted her new-found wealth in a way that embarrassed her family.

hopefullyStrictly speaking, hopefully is an adverb, meaning with hope:

He spoke hopefully of his life after graduation.

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It has become fairly common in the past few decades to use hopefully as a substitute for it

is hoped that/I/we/you/they hope that, placing it in the same class as sentence modifiers or

disjuncts such as regrettably and fortunately:

‘Hopefully, life will be much more relaxed after graduation,’ he said.

Be aware that some readers/listeners do not like the newer meaning.

Hopefully can also cause problems by creating squinting modifier ambiguity (see online

chapter 1):

They will enter the contest hopefully on Monday morning.

imply/inferImply (verb): to suggest indirectly.

When he said that he wouldn’t consider any more job cuts at this time, he was perhaps

implying that he would consider them before too long.

Infer (verb): to derive conclusions from evidence or premises.

When he said that he wouldn’t consider any more job cuts at this time, we inferred that

perhaps the organisation was in worse shape financially than was hitherto thought.

Test: Speakers imply, listeners infer.

irregardless/regardlessRegardless (adverb): in spite of everything, heedless.

Ignore the noise. We will work on regardless.

Regardless is already the negation of regard, and thus ir-regard-less is a double negative.

Perhaps similarity to irrespective causes this error.

it’s/itsIts: possessive pronoun.

The dog was wagging its tail.

It’s: contraction of it is (pronoun + verb).

It’s a good thing we showed up when we did.

literallyLiterally (adverb): actually, in a literal manner.

Don’t take my remarks literally.

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Problems arise when people use literally as an intensive, or as a substitute for virtually or

figuratively:

She literally exploded with delight on hearing the verdict.

loathe/loathLoathe (verb): to dislike someone or something greatly, abhor.

I loathe all of this grunge, rap, hip-hop, urban, techno and retro music.

Loath (adjective): reluctant (also spelt loth).

I am loath to put the radio on these days.

moreMore can present problems when, depending upon the syntax of the sentence, it is acting as

an adverb modifying an adjective. For example:

I had to deal with more angry customers.

Are there more customers who are angry? Is a second group of customers angrier than the

first group?

To clarify, the sentence could be recast. For example:

I had to deal with another group of angry customers.

I had to deal with further/new/other angry customers.

I had to deal with customers who were even angrier than the ones we had in this morning.

I had to deal with angrier customers.

More should be used to modify count nouns (see online chapter 1, p. 1.43), so that no ambi-

guities arise.

obsolete/obsolescentObsolete (adjective): no longer in use.

That batch of 1969 transistors is totally obsolete.

Obsolescent (adjective): becoming obsolete.

That model is still usable, but be aware that the industry considers it obsolescent, and you

should try to upgrade as soon as possible.

personnel/personalPersonal (adjective): private, individual.

Those books are my personal property, and I want them back now.

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Personnel (noun): staff, persons employed in work, the department that looks after staffing

and related matters.

We’ve got the equipment, but not the personnel, to do this job properly.

phenomena/phenomenonPhenomenon (noun): an occurrence, a circumstance or a fact that is perceptible by the senses;

an unusual, significant or unaccountable fact or occurrence; a marvel.

The lights in the sky were a most unusual phenomenon.

Phenomena is the plural of phenomenon. Avoid using the plural form in a singular

context.

This is a most unusual phenomena.

principle/principalPrincipal (adjective): main, primary, chief.

The principal reason for my wanting the job is that I need the money.

Principal (noun): executive of a school; an amount of money generating interest; a main

participant in a situation.

The Principal strode down the corridor, oblivious to the hormonal warfare taking place

around him.

Spend the interest but don’t touch your principal.

I’ll have to contact my principal to see if we are willing to concede so much in what is, after

all, just a routine negotiation.

Principle (noun): a basic truth or law, a rule or standard.

I’m not going to walk away from my principles just because people like that wave money

under my nose.

question, begging theBegging the question means circular reasoning, or assuming what needs to be proved.

Examples would be:

Students like hip hop music because it is the most enjoyable music around.

Have you started paying your fair share of taxes yet?

The first sentence is basically saying that people find something is enjoyable because it is

enjoyable, which is not very enlightening. The second sentence is a loaded question: the con-

cept of what is a ‘fair share’ may not have been established, just as it may not have been

established that the person to whom the question is addressed has not been paying such an

amount (see chapter 13, ‘Argument: logic, persuasion and influence’).

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Thus, begging the question refers to a particular type of logical fallacy. It should not be

used to merely signify ‘prompting or raising a question or issue,’ for example:

This performance begs the question of whether the team will play well tomorrow.

sanctionSanction (verb; contranym): authorative permission, serving to support an action; a provision

of law; penalty. For example:

We will not sanction her conduct.

However, does sanction here mean to endorse or to penalise? This sentence is ambiguous,

and could be recast in two ways. For example:

We will not endorse her conduct.

We will not penalise her conduct.

Further clarity of meaning can be made by adding context and syntax. For example:

She has brought in so many contracts this month, I’m quite happy to sanction a bonus for

her.

If you keep stealing photocopy paper, and they find you out, you will be sanctioned heavily

by the boss.

Sanctions (noun) as a plural noun gives a clearly negative meaning. For example:

The United Nations approved economic sanctions against Zimbabwe.

that/whichSome writers prefer to introduce restrictive clauses (containing essential information) with

that, preferring to introduce non-restrictive clauses (containing non-essential information)

with which and set off by commas:

Teams that have a high internal level of trust tend to be very effective.

Teams, which seem to be the norm in some workplaces today, need to have high internal

levels of trust to be very effective.

they’re/their/thereThey’re: contraction of they are.

They’re coming over at 6 o’clock.

Their: third person plural possessive pronoun.

It’s their house, and they can do what they like with it.

There (adverb): at or in that place.

They’re going there in their car.

A homophone problem.

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to/too/two To (preposition): in the direction of; towards.

Walk to the balcony and look out.

Too (adverb): also, as well.

I’m coming too.

Two (noun): the number 2.

He rolled the dice and threw a two.

A homophone problem.

Correct any vocabulary errors you find in these sentences.

(a) Since I began that project myself, I have to be involved, and thus I find it very hard not to see

criticisms of it as being personnel criticisms of me.

(b) I can see flaws in that document just as you can, but I am loathe to expose it’s weaknesses to

all and sundry.

(c) When you talk in those terms, you seem to be inferring that there comfort is the only criteria we

should be applying when we consider overall budget outlays.

(d) I realise that you are disinterested in this entire task, but you have to get a grip on the

personnel and time constraints we are under, and schedule this so that it can be edited by

May or June.

(e) We need too ensure that our budget allocations, that can fluctuate from year to year, are at least

as great as Manufacturing or Marketing.

(f) Now that we have brought that property, we need to monitor local property prices and rates to

see if we have unwittingly triggered any negative affects on the situation.

(g) I am not adverse to criticism, irregardless of who makes it.

(h) Counsel members need to know if there is going to be any change in the wording of your

proposal, so please appraise me of any mooted variation.

(i) Your company’s marketing strategy will compliment ours precisely, so please be careful not to

jeopardise this outcome by being seen to flaunt any of the regulator’s rules on competitive

practices.

(j) When they didn’t show up for the meeting they demonstrated, in my view, that they propose to

literally freeze us out, and this begs the question of why we are involved with them in the first

place.

(k) We will not sanction her conduct.

SummaryIn this chapter we explored different aspects of punctuation, spelling and usage. We saw that

punctuation is intimately linked to grammar. We looked at end punctuation, such as the full

stop or point, as well as the exclamation mark and question mark. As with all punctuation

marks, we saw that there are numerous correct and incorrect uses of such end punctuation.

ASSESS YOURSELF

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We then considered the comma, the colon, the semicolon, the apostrophe, the dash, the

hyphen, parentheses and brackets, quotation marks and ellipses.

We then turned our attention to spelling. We identified some of the major mechanical and

cultural pitfalls in spelling. English is a difficult language. It has a number of letters that are

not pronounced or are pronounced differently in different words. This irregularity affects

approximately 400 of the most frequently used words. People often misspell because they do

not understand the parts of speech or because they mispronounce words and then spell them

that way. There are a number of rules covering suffixes and how the root word changes when

particular suffixes are added.

We then identified some the major pitfalls in vocabulary and usage. Words can be confused

when they are homophones or have more then one meaning, or when breakdowns in syntax

occur.

1. A full stop is used to show the conclusion of a sentence. Define a sentence.

2. What is the difference between rhetorical punctuation and syntactic punctuation.

3. How might exclamation marks be misused?

4. How can commas be used to prevent ambiguity in sentences?

5. What is a comma splice, and how does it differ from a run-on or fused sentence?

6. What function does a colon perform?

7. How might a semicolon be misused?

8. What is the relationship between the apostrophe and the grammatical concept

of case?

9. What is the difference between a dash and a hyphen?

10. Most parentheses, brackets and quotation marks share a characteristic that is often

associated with editing errors. What is it?

Student study guide

KEY TERMSapostrophe p. 2.15

bloopers p. 2.32

brackets p. 2.20

capitalisation p. 2.18

code switching p. 2.20

colon p. 2.13

comma p. 2.6

confusables p. 2.32

contranym p. 2.33

dash p. 2.23

eggcorn p. 2.30

ellipsis p. 2.27

exclamation mark p. 2.6

full stop (period, point) p. 2.4

heteromorph p. 2.32

heteronym p. 2.32

homonym p. 2.32

homophone p. 2.32

howlers p. 2.32

hyphen p. 2.23

malapropism p. 2.30

mondegreen p. 2.30

open punctuation p. 2.5

parapraxes p. 2.32

parentheses p. 2.20

question mark p. 2.5

quotation marks p. 2.25

rhetorical punctuation p. 2.2

semicolon p. 2.11

syntactic punctuation p. 2.2

REVIEW QUESTIONS

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11. How might an ellipsis be misused?

12. What are homophones, and why do they sometimes cause problems in spelling and

usage?

1. Because of the diverse history of the language, there aren’t that many rules for English

spelling, and of those that exist, there are often many exceptions to them. There is little

point in trying to memorise rules as an abstract exercise. The best way to learn basic

and advanced spelling skills is simply to use words in the context of sentences, and to

note how spellings change according to changes in tense, number, person or parts of

speech. In other words, in order to be able to spell words correctly, you need to know

the meanings of words. Spelling and vocabulary skills are thus merely two sides of the

same coin.

You also need to know how to use a dictionary. This could just be a catch-22

situation: how do I look up the spelling of a word when I’m not a good speller to begin

with? It is hard work, but it can be done. Most words by definition begin with

consonants, so at least you can start with the first letter — and there are only a few

consonants that sound like others (C/K, C/S, G/J, for example). Another technique is to

think of a similar word you do know how to spell, and look that word up in that other

indispensable tool, a thesaurus.

Over the next few pages, you will find many of the words most commonly misspelled in

English. Perform this exercise:

(a) Photocopy these lists, or perhaps better still, copy them out.

(b) Cut up the photocopy sheets or the sheets on which you have written so that each

word is on a separate scrap of paper.

(c) Place all scraps in a bowl and draw out three at a time.

(d) Take these three words, and then work them into a meaningful sentence.

(e) Staying with the same three words, create a second sentence by changing at least one

of the words: change to another part of speech (e.g. a noun to an adjective [criticism to

critical], an adverb to an adjective [wholly to whole], and don’t forget non-finite verbs),

or change a singular noun to a plural one, or change the tense of a verb.

Thus if you drew out reminisce, bureaucracy and separate, your sentences might be

similar to these:

Just to complicate matters, if a word is a homophone (having a similar sound), then

you should use as many other homophones of that word as you know in the sentence

(e.g. raze, raise, rays, Ray’s).

APPLIED ACTIVIT IES

We would often sit around

and reminisce about the

times the various arms of the

bureaucracy would try to

separate members of our

family.

The bureaucrats, who until

recently had worked in

separate but related

departments, shared

reminiscences of times

gone by.

Separately we would try to

destroy their bureaucratic

computer systems, in a

manner reminiscent of

better-known hackers

throughout the world.

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Repeat this procedure of selecting words and writing sentences nine times. You

should thus end up with 10 × 2 = 20 sentences. Of course, you are free to do this as

many times as you like, and the more you do it, the better your skills will become.

(continued)

accommodate dispel lenient raze

acquainted dyeing liable receipt

acreage ecstasy library reminisce

altar eighth license reversible

amateur embarrass maintenance rhinoceros

annihilate environment manageable rhythm

apiece fascinate management sacrifice

approximately February mathematics sacrilegious

arraign forfeit mischievous satellite

assassination forty misspelled scene

Britain gauge mortgage schedule

bureaucracy government muscle separate

cafeteria governor museum sergeant

category grammar noticing sheriff

cede grievous nuclear siege

ceiling handkerchief nuisance skiing

cemetery harass occasionally souvenir

characteristic haven’t occurred stationery

chateau height omission straight

coarse hindrance originally strength

column humorous panicky teammate

commercial hypocrisy parallel technique

committee ideally paralysis they’re

competent idiosyncrasy pastime thoroughly

condemn illogical personnel treacherous

conscientious immigrant persuade twelfth

coolly imminent predetermine tyranny

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2. Explore some of the websites listed in the E-info sources section and discover some other

vocabulary problem words and phrases.

3. Experiment with the language feature of at least one word processor (where the ‘style ‘of

English is set to one particular national culture). Find out what spellings that language

style accepts and rejects.

4. Using print and online sources, create a list of spelling and vocabulary differences

between two different countries where English is used: for example, Britain and the US or

India/Canada or Australia/South Africa. Now write a simple story of 200–300 words,

creating two different versions of the story. Two sample beginnings are given below:

Your next-door neighbour, Natalya, has come in, asking you to witness a will she has

written. She has often said that she doesn’t want to waste money on lawyers (‘They’re all

parasites!’), and she has written her will with a do-it-yourself will kit. Her English is not all

that good, but looking over the will, you see that her expression is not all that bad.

Coughing hoarsely, she says that she wants to divide her estate among four equal parties.

You notice that one of these is your estranged spouse, Chris, with whom you are trying to

reconcile, although there is still a lot of ill feeling between you. Despite the distraction of

your neighbour’s coughing and her loud description of her health troubles, you

concentrate enough to see that there might be a problem in the wording. Part of it reads,

‘I bequeath my estate in equal portions to Sol Chassy, my brother; Myra Perton, my former

business partner; and Chris Waldon and Matthew Yii’. But does that mean that all four

criticism independent prejudice unanimous

deceive initiative prevalent unconscious

definitely innocuous principal usage

descendant irresistible privilege vacuum

diphtheria it’s psychology vigilance

disappoint kindergarten psychiatry weird

disastrous laboratory questionnaire whether

discipline length quizzes wholly

UK version US version

One fine Autumn day, Joe walked down the

footpath to the centre of town to pick up his

new lorry, which was parked behind the

service station.

One fine Fall day, Joe walked down the

sidewalk to the center of town to pick up his

new truck, which was parked in back of the

gas station.

WHAT WOULD YOU DO?

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parties get one-quarter each, or does it mean that the first two people get one-third, and

the last two people share one-third, or get one-sixth each? You start to explain the

potential problem to Natalya, when she suddenly stumbles, drops her cigarette, and gasps

for air, holding her chest. You realise that she may be having a heart attack! You telephone

for an ambulance, and you can soon hear its siren. At that very moment, Chris, using a

spare front door key, walks in.

1. How could the will be re-worded?

1. How might you explain the implications of the current punctuation in the will to Natalya

(if she recovers)? How might you explain the implications to Chris (without triggering a

major misunderstanding)?

REFERENCES

Austen, Jane 2006 (1813), Pride and Prejudice, Penguin Red

series, London.

Baron, Naomi 2000, Alphabet to email: how written English

evolved and where it’s heading, Routledge, London.

Blake, NF 1996, A history of the English language, Macmillan,

London.

Bremner, Charles 2008, ‘Save our semi-colon, say French

campaigners’, Times Online, April 1, http://

timescorrespondents.typepad.com.

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Bryson, Bill 2001, The mother tongue: English and how it got

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Buerger, David J. 1988, ‘Observing e-mail etiquette can make

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no 8, 22 February, p. 17.

Burridge, Kate 2004, Blooming English: observations on the

roots, cultivation and hybrids of the English language,

Cambridge University Press.

Crystal, David 2006, The fight for English: How language

pedants ate, shot and left, Oxford University Press.

Crystal, David 2003, The Cambridge encyclopedia of the

English language, 2nd edn, Cambridge University Press.

Dowling, Dave 2006, The wrong word dictionary: 2,000 most

commonly confused words, Marion Street Press, Oak

Park, IL.

‘Eggcorns’, New Scientist, vol. 191, no. 2566, p. 52.

Erard, Michael 2007, Um . . . : slips, stumbles, and verbal

blunders, and what they mean, Pantheon, New York.

Garner, Bryan A. 2005, ‘Don’t know much about punctuation:

notes on a stickler wannabe’, Texas Law Review, vol. 83,

no.5, pp. 1443–1452.

Glatzer, Jenna 2004, Words you thought you knew: 1001

commonly misused and misunderstood words and phrases,

Adams Media Corporation, Cincinnati, OH.

Harley, TA 2006, ‘Speech errors: psycholinguistic approach’, in

K. Brown (Ed.) Encyclopedia of language & linguistics, 2nd

edn, Elsevier, New York, pp. 739–745.

Henley, Jon 2008, ‘The end of the line?’ The Guardian, April 4,

www.guardian.co.uk.

Hicks, Wynford 2004, Quite literally: problem words and how

to use them, Routledge, London.

Horne, Phillip 2003, ‘Selected textual variants’, in C. Dickens,

2003 (1838/1846), Oliver Twist, Penguin, London.

Jamison, Kathleen Hall 2007, ‘Justifying the war in Iraq: what

the Bush administration’s uses of evidence reveal’, Rhetoric

& Public Affairs, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 249–274.

King, Peter J. 2005, ‘Howlers and the like’, http://

users.ox.ac.uk.

Larocque, Laurette, 2000, Interactional parapraxes: A window

onto out representations of self and others, Journal of the

American Academy of Psychoanalysis, vol. 28, no. 1, pp.

25–37.

Lederer, Richard 1997, Fractured English, Pocket Books, New

York.

Lederer, Richard 1996, ‘Looking at Language Archives’, http://

www.verbivore.com.

Lenhart, Amanda et al. 2008, Writing, technology and teens,

Report by Pew Internet for The National Commission on

Writing, Washington DC.

Lewin, Tamar 2008, ‘Informal style of electronic messages is

showing up in schoolwork, study finds,’ The New York

Times, April 25, www.nytimes.com.

Liberman, Mark, & Pullum, Geoffrey K. 2006, Far from the

madding gerund and other dispatches from language log,

William, James & Co., Wilsonville, OR.

McGreevy, Norman 2007, Must try harder! The very worst best

(sic) howlers by schoolchildren, Constable, London.

Reason, James 2000, ‘The Freudian slip revisited’, The

Psychologist, vol. 13, no.12, pp. 610−611,

www.thepsychologist.org.uk.

Room, Adrian 1988 Dictionary of confusing words and

meanings, Dorset Press, New York.

Schou, Karsten 2007 ‘The syntactic status of English

punctuation’, English Studies, vol. 88, no. 2, pp 195–216.

Sutherland, Kathryn 2007 Jane Austen’s textual lives: from

Aeschylus to Bollywood, Oxford University Press.

The Macquarie dictionary: Australia’s national dictionary

2001, rev. 3rd edn, Macquarie Library, Sydney.

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p. 2.32: Excerpts from ‘The World According to Student Bloopers’ from ‘Anguished English’ by Richard Lederer and Gibbs Smith,

ISBN 978 0 941711 81 4.

Truss, Lynne 2003, Eats shoots and leaves: the zero tolerance

approach to punctuation, Profile Books, London.

Truss, Lynne, and Timmons, Bonnie 2008 Twenty-odd ducks:

why, every punctuation mark counts! Putnam Juvenile/

Penguin, New York.

Underwood, Lamar (ed.) 2004, The quotable writer, The Lyons

Press, Guilford, CT.

Wines, Jacquie 2007 Mondegreens: A book of mishearings,

Michael O’Mara Books, London.

Wright, Sylvia 1954, ‘The Death of Lady Mondegreen,’ Harper’s

Magazine, no. 209, November, pp. 48–51.

SUGGESTED READING

Blamires, Harry 1997, The Cassell guide to common errors in

English, Cassell, London.

Blamires, Harry 2001, The Penguin guide to plain English,

Penguin, London.

Burchfield, Robert 2004, Fowler’s modern English usage (re-

revised 3rd edn) Oxford University Press.

Burchfield, Robert 1998, The new Fowler’s modern English

usage, Oxford University Press.

Eunson, Baden 1994, Writing skills, John Wiley & Sons,

Brisbane.

Gordon, Karen Elizabeth 2004, The new well-tempered

sentence: a punctuation handbook for the innocent, the

eager and the doomed, Mariner Books/Houghton Mifflin,

New York.

Greenbaum, Sidney & Whitcut, Janet 1996, Longman guide to

English usage, Penguin, London.

Hicks, Wynford (in press), Problem words, Routledge, London.

Lovinger, Paul W 2002, The Penguin Dictionary of American

English usage and style, Penguin, New York.

Peters, Pam 2007, The Cambridge guide to Australian English

usage, 2nd edn, Cambridge University Press.

Peters, Pam 2004, Cambridge English style guide, Cambridge

University Press.

Reader’s Digest 1989, How to write and speak better, Reader’s

Digest, Sydney.

Rozakis, Laurie E 1997, The complete idiot’s guide to grammar

and style, Alpha Books, New York.

Sheffer, Marguerite 2006, The suggestive semicolon, http://

pronoiaprize.com.

Truss, Lynne 2003, Eats shoots and leaves: the zero tolerance

approach to punctuation, Profile Books, London.

Venolia, Jan 2001, Write right!: a desktop digest of

punctuation, grammar and style, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley,

CA.

Wilson, Kenneth G. 1993, The Columbia guide to standard

American English, Columbia University Press, New York.

Wolman, David 2009, Righting the mother tongue: from olde

English to email, the tangled story of English spelling,

Collins, London.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS