The Great Typo Hunt
jamie writes "Incensed by a 'no tresspassing' sign, Jeff Deck launched a cross-country trip to right grammatical wrongs. He enlisted a friend, Benjamin D. Herson, and together they erased errant quotation marks, rectified misspellings and cut unnecessary possessive apostrophes. The Great Typo Hunt is the story of their crusade." We have already covered the duo's fight with The National Park Service.
Probably Farside.
Kind of? More like supremely...
http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/2008/08/22/20080822grammarcops0822.html
On March 28, while at Desert View Watchtower on the South Rim, they used a white-out product and a permanent marker to deface a sign painted more than 60 years ago by artist Mary Colter. The sign, a National Historic Landmark, was considered unique and irreplaceable, according to Sandy Raynor, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Phoenix.
Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
I'm looking for the cited 'TEAL' website, and everything I click on leads me to their book. I don't give a crap about the book, I just want to see photos of their work.
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If you're actually interested: fewer relates to countable nouns, less to uncountable. Less water, fewer glasses. "Less glasses" sounds as wrong as "fewer water".
Of course, few people read edited prose these days, and so most lack the "ear" for poor usage. It will be an odd time for language, with almost everyone literate but not reading books.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
"Data" is plural; the singular is "datum". Just like errata and erratum. In a sense you're right, "data" has turned into a popular word and its meaning is changing, but trying to claim that it has recently become popular to use it as plural is completely wrong; rather the reverse is true.
You know, that quote continues. The next sentence after you cut it off: "Modern standard English practice does not reflect this distinction."
Note that they said standard. The entry is actually endorsing the use of constructions like less words and less men.
Um, from dictionary.com: "data (noun): a pl. of datum." Yes, the very same source that you misleadingly cite as an authority above for less/fewer.
Care to actually argue why? I can't tell you how wrong you are about that unless you spell out why you think so.
Are you adequate?
I dropped the dish.
I dropped the dishes.
I dropped the fish.
I dropped the fish.
Different words act differently. In this case "it" seems to get an "s" sound for the same reason "cat" gets an "s" sound. Leaving out the "'" just because it is a pronoun is dumb.
"linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
"Vegetarian chilli-con-carne" is no more an oxymoron that "soy meat" is. There are plenty of so-called intensional or non-intersective grammatical constructions, where modifying X with Y results in an expression that is not an X. A "fake Rolex" is not a Rolex; it's something that's pretending to be a Rolex. Likewise, "vegetarian chili con carne" is not chili con carne; it's a vegetarian dish that substitutes for chili con carne.
Are you adequate?
Not like errata and erratum. Common usage of errata maintains the separate identity of the individual items within the group: We've collected errata for this textbook over a 12 month period. (Each erratum trickled in from readers; the entire set didn't show up all at once.) On the other hand, if you refer to them as a group: The errata is ready for formatting. (Each individual item is not going to be formatted independently—the formatting will be applied to the errata as a whole, all at once. The implied measure word is "section," as in the errata section of a book that is to be formatted.)
Data is actually more like agenda and media.
:->
but have you considered the following argument: shut up.