Wednesday, August 25, 2010

You Keep Using That Word - Incorrectly

Oh, if all writers would just memorize this list, editors and copy editors would have a much easier life!

http://www.copyblogger.com/commonly-misused-words/

The Inigo Montoya Guide to 27 Commonly Misused Words
by Brian Clark


You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means. ~Inigo Montoya, The Princess Bride

Adverse / Averse
Adverse means unfavorable. Averse means reluctant.

Afterwards
Afterwards is wrong in American English. It’s afterward.

Complement / Compliment
I see this one all the time. Complement is something that adds to or supplements something else. Compliment is something nice someone says about you.

Criteria
Criteria is plural, and the singular form is criterion. If someone tells you they have only one criteria, you can quickly interject and offer that it be they get a clue.

Farther / Further
Farther is talking about a physical distance.
“How much farther is Disney World, Daddy?”
Further is talking about an extension of time or degree.
“Take your business further by reading Copyblogger.”

Fewer / Less
If you can count it, use fewer. If you can’t, use less.
“James has less incentive to do what I say.”
“Tony has fewer subscribers since he stopped blogging.”

Historic / Historical
Historic means an important event. Historical means something that happened in the past.

Hopefully
This word is used incorrectly so much (including by me) it may be too late. But let’s make you smarter anyway. The old school rule is you use hopefully only if you’re describing the way someone spoke, appeared, or acted.
• Smart: I hope she says yes.
• Wrong: Hopefully, she says yes.
• Wrong: Hopefully, the weather will be good.
• Smart: It is hoped that the weather cooperates.
• Smart: She eyed the engagement ring hopefully.

Imply / Infer
Imply means to suggest indirectly (you’re sending a subtle message). To infer is to come to a conclusion based on information (you’re interpreting a message).

Insure / Ensure
Insure is correct only when you call up Geico or State Farm for coverage. Ensure means to guarantee, and that’s most often what you’re trying to say, right?

Irregardless
Irregardless is not a word. Use regardless or irrespective.

Literally
“I’m literally starving to death.”
No, odds are, you’re not.
Literally means exactly what you say is accurate, no metaphors or analogies. Everything else is figurative (relative, a figure of speech).

Premier / Premiere
Premier is the first and best in status or importance, or a prime minister. Premiere is the opening night of Star Wars 8: George Wants More Money.

Principal / Principle
Principal when used as a noun means the top dog; as an adjective, it means the most important of any set. Principle is a noun meaning a fundamental truth, a law, a rule that always applies, or a code of conduct.

Towards
Towards is wrong in American English. It’s toward. I went 41 years not being sure about this one.

Unique
Unique means (literally) one of a kind. Saying something is very or truly unique is wacked. It’s either a purple cow or it isn’t.

Who / Whom
This one is a lost cause, but let’s go down swinging. The way to deal with the who versus whom quandary is a simple substitution method.
First, a refresher on subjects and objects.
Subjects do the action:
“He/she/we like(s) to rock the house.”
Objects receive the action:
“The rock star sneered at him/her/us.”
Use who for subjects and whom for objects.
Subjects:
• Who wrote this blog post?
• Who is speaking at the conference?
• Who is going to clean up this mess?
Objects:
• Whom are you going to write about?
• Whom did he blame for the Google Slap?
• Whom did he bait for the links?
Truth is, whom just doesn’t sound right in many situations where it’s correct, especially in the US. You now know the rule… feel free to break it.

7 comments:

Ann Bruce said...

Kelli, is this post yours?

Skylar Kade said...

Thank you for this post! This is a *huge* pet peeve of mine. It drives me nuts seeing them in online essays/news articles. Glad we writers have editors to catch these errors.

Ebony McKenna. said...

What a wonderful blog post. I think I'm in love with you!

ECPI Editors said...

Nope, Ann, the post is from me, but as you can see I didn't write it. But it's a list that rings in the heart of every editor!

Raelene

Janine Ashbless said...

Heh. When I wrote for an English publisher they changed every instance of "afterward" and "toward" to "afterwards" and "towards," to my irritation. So I'm sort of relieved now!

Anonymous said...

Actually, I just looked up "toward" and "towards" in MW11 last week, because I came across "towards" in an article I was proofreading and wanted to be sure. To my surprise, both are listed as acceptable. Of course, if you're using a different dictionary as your reference, it might not be.

Juliette Dupree said...

THANK YOU! I've been driving myself crazy trying to figure out if it's "toward" or "towards"!

I started out reading this, thinking "Adverse/averse? Ha, ha, these are all mistakes I'll never--umm...uh-oh."

God bless my "Replace All" button.

;-)