by Martha Punches
Good Morning,
Writing Class.
Let’s be
honest here. How many times have you been reading along, thoroughly enjoying
your leisure reading time, and gotten jerked out of your concentration on the
hot sex story/murderer being revealed/cliffhanger ending because the
author has used THAT instead of WHO? Am I the only one who hates this? Nah, I
can’t be.
WHO. When
you have to use either Who or That, think person. Who, and
this is no pun intended, is this word or phrase referring to? If your sentence
has a person mentioned, you should use WHO, not THAT.
Example:
All the usual suspects were gathered
in the parlor. Only Greeves, the butler that found the poor strangled
Headmaster, was missing.
No no no no no! Okay, this is a personal pet peeve
of mine but it grates on my nerves to read it that way.
Read the
sentences again but put in who for that.
All the usual suspects were gathered
in the parlor. Only Greeves, the butler who found the poor strangled
Headmaster, was missing.
Now doesn’t
that sound much better? Just agree with me and it will cause a whole lot less
friction! I won’t be forced to issue a complaint about the whole matter.
According to
the Quick and Dirty Tips Grammar Girl site (http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/who-versus-that.aspx), the Who versus
That issue has gray areas. Many are convinced you must use Who with people
and you use That with an object. Others would swear you have to use That with
people. However, there is no hard and fast rule.
Consistency is the key. I absolutely love
her quote. “To me, using that when you are
talking about a person makes them seem less than human. I always think of my
friend who would only refer to his new stepmother as the woman that married
my father. He was clearly trying to indicate his animosity and you
wouldn't want to do that accidentally.” So, unless you are writing hard core science
fiction and want to refer to your characters as objects or things, not humns or human-like, use Who!
There
may not be a ‘Use It Or Else’ rule in all the grammar books, but be nice. Use
Who with people and That with objects. Make me happy.
Memory
tip: That = Things
And
that concludes our session about Who
versus That. Our next lesson will be
on the usage of That versus Which.
Class
dismissed.
4 comments:
Thank you! This is one of my very major pet peeves. Now, if someone could do a piece on subject/verb agreement - in particular was/were.
Ditto to anon! The was-were thing is tricky.
He wished he were taller.
He wished he was taller.
PLEASE do a tip sheet on that!
Or using the possessive as opposed to the plural. MY pet peeve :-)
Love, love, love this post! Thanks for highlighting the easiest way ever to decide between "who" and "that."
Now, if only we could find a way to unify subjects and objects once and for all: "Americans live their life one day at a time" vs. "Americans live their lives one day at a time."
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