Archives pour l'août 2007

Modules de l'anglais VIII : Noms

Les noms semblent comme un concept de base en anglais, mais comme tout autrement dans la grammaire anglaise, ils semblent confondre l'estacade à claire-voie hors de la plupart des personnes.

Je broche cette matière après observation d'un segment de Êtes-vous plus futé qu'une cinquième niveleuse ? (tristement, peu d'adultes sont), qui a comporté une question demandant au contestant d'appeler les trois noms propres dans une phrase d'échantillon.

Mme. Contestant, un diplômé d'université avec des 3.5 GPA, trébuchés partout avant de finalement être d'accord avec une cinquième niveleuse et l'obtenir droit. (Elle était prête à prononcer deux des noms propres pour être des pronoms ; la cinquième niveleuse a su mieux et était plus futée.)

L'ok, ce qui est un nom ?

Pleine histoire »

Signalé par le grammarblogger

Wikipedia réduit un prince hollandais

Aucun vraiment, mais le titre a semblé bon.

Ce qui s'est produit réellement était qu'un prince hollandais dans la ligne pour le trône s'est fait attraper dans un scandale et a dû renoncer à sa succession au trône.

Puis, séduit par le tout-mal Wikipedia, il est allé à l'emplacement pour amortir scandale-et s'est fait attraper.

Prince vilain et vilain !

Signalé par le grammarblogger

Bédouins : Nouvel argot pour le Telebusinessperson

J'ai lu récemment ces trois quarts des États-Unis les petites entreprises n'ont aucuns employés ou bureau parce qu'elles sont des opérations individuelles courues d'un ordinateur de bureau, ou plus récemment, d'un ordinateur portable sur l'aller.

Une limite a été lovée pour des ces businesspeople d'ordinateur portable : Bédouins.

Maintenant, traditionnellement un bédouin est un nomade dans le désert, ainsi qu'image s'adapte ?

Comme sorte d'un bédouin d'affaires moi-même, je dois dire que l'analogie est convenable. Je me sens souvent comme si je suis perdu dans un désert.

Avoir parfois un mauvais patron à hurler à toi est davantage rassurer de votre existence que se reposant devant votre ordinateur portable et faisant ce que vous voulez faire.

Nah, pas vraiment.

Signalé par le grammarblogger

Wikipedia : Partez de la maison sans elle

I forget whose credit card ad advises “don’t leave home without it,” but when it comes to Wikipedia, my advice is to leave everywhere without it. It’s just highly unreliable as a source of information.

Since Wikipedia can be edited by anyone who registers with the site, its pages are constantly being “updated” by those with a stake in the information, whether a person or a business, and many of these edits are far from objective or even truthful.

Case in point: A company called FAST recently suffered a huge share drop, but when Wikipedia reported this, someone (guess who?) kept deleting the information.

Now an editor at Wikipedia has posted a notice on the page for the party responsible to cease deleting the information.

Read the whole page. It’s fascinating, and it will show you why I say, “Never trust Wikipedia.”

Posted by grammarblogger

Evil Wikipedia: How to Thwart Your Ruination

I’m neither famous or successful, and thus Wikipedia–the open-source encyclopedia for the Web 2.0 generation–would never feature me in its pages. So unless fame or fortune descend upon me, I’m safe from the “slings and arrows of outrageous fortune” that can be an article in the pages of Wikipedia.

The problem with [tag]Wikipeda[/tag], and the root of its success as well, is that it is a wiki at heart, an open source that anyone can edit by simply registering.

Is that such a bad thing, you ask?

Full Story »

Posted by grammarblogger

Verb Conjugator

When I’m vegetating, I like to watch baseball and food shows on TV, which brings up today’s topic.

When one conjugates English verbs, the three basic forms are present, simple past and past participle. Thus when one conjugates swim, one gets swim, swam, swum.

Applying that same logical pattern to swing, as in "to swing at a pitch," I figured the conjugation should be swing, swang, swung. However, I couldn’t find anyone who agreed with me, though I did only the most cursory of Internet searches.

I did uncover a 1950 Time article noting how [tag]Casey Stengel[/tag] used to say swing, swanged, swunged, bringing him closer to my interpretation than any modernist.

Most important, however, I found a site that will conjugate verbs for you in many languages. Go to Verbix and conjugate away if you’re curious.

Give the site a swing and make sure you swang away with all your might. In the end, you will have swung mightily.

Posted by grammarblogger

Building Blocks of English VII: Relative Clauses

We’ve looked at dependent and independent clauses in a previous Building Blocks. Now let’s look at [tag]relative clauses[/tag].

Specifically, let’s look at restrictive and nonrestrictive clauses, also known as essential and nonessential clauses. To define, a restrictive (essential) clause adds important information to a sentence and cannot be eliminated without changing the meaning of the sentence. A nonrestrictive (nonessential) clause, however, adds parenthetical information that can easily be eliminated without changing the meaning of the sentence.

Let’s look at some examples:

The man who is wearing the red hat just murdered the bank teller.

Here, the clause "who is wearing the red hat" specifically limits the murderer to that one man with the chapeau. You cannot remove this clause without changing the meaning of the sentence.

The man, who is wearing a red hat, asked for a glass of water with his meal.

Here you have the same clause, but it’s nonrestrictive. The meaning of the sentence is solely contained in the act of asking for a glass of water. The red hat has no bearing on the meaning; it’s extra, parenthetical information. (I admit, however, that this is not the greatest example since you can remove the commas and make this a restrictive clause.)

Notice that the commas signify that the clause in question is nonessential or nonrestrictive. You never use commas with a restrictive clause, and the presence of the commas signals the reader that the information is not essential.

The person who reads and masters this will better understand relative clauses.

Posted by grammarblogger

Useful Site for APA and Grammar Issues

One of my students came across this great site on APA, but it includes links to other resources on English grammar, usage and writing. It’s a good resource to keep handy.

Posted by grammarblogger

Heard on the Radio

As I was driving around on business yesterday, I had my radio turned to [tag]ESPN[/tag], all sports, all talk.

When the news segment came on at the half-hour and top-of-the-hour points, the announcer read this news bit not once, but at least twice (I am paraphrasing but this is damn close, and the clincher is pretty much word for word):

Former NBA referee [tag]Tim Donaghy[/tag] pleaded guilty today to two federal conspiracy charges…. If found guilty, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

If found guilty? He just confessed and pled guilty. There will be no trial.

Whoever wrote that copy should be convicted of butchering logic and facts.

Posted by grammarblogger

O.J.’s Book Available Soon

If I Did It, O.J. Simpson’s theoretical account of how he might (har de har har) have carried out the double murder of his ex-wife and her friend, soon will be available from Amazon.com after months of making the underground, black market rounds.

In a strange twist, the family of murdered Nicole Brown Simpson companion Ron Goldman, which a decade ago won a $33.5 million wrongful death judgment against [tag]O.J. Simpson[/tag], has been awarded rights to the book by a judge. Alledgely, the Goldman family has even added its own commentary to the tome.

I don’t think I’d be caught dead reading this book, but an excerpt of how O.J. "might" have carried out the gackings would be quite illuminating.

Posted by grammarblogger