Word Nerds: Verbal Custodians Trapped in a Time Warp
|
A big drawback to a column like this is being perceived as having
insufferable attitude: “So, Mr. Expert, I guess you think
you’re so superior.”
It’s not like that. Word nerds do custodial work. A lot of brilliant
people can’t write. Ernest Hemingway was a terrible speller. Word
nerds don’t think they’re “better”—do
janitors think they’re better than the office workers they clean up
after?
I often wonder why I bother about details that concern so few normal
people. Oh, I know what Arthur Conan Doyle said: “[T]he little things
are infinitely the most important,” but on the other hand, I once saw
Dick Cavett take a swipe at noted Harvard law professor-author Alan
Dershowitz by correcting his grammar. Dershowitz made a sour (but
unperturbed) face and shot back that unlike Cavett, he was too busy making
a difference in the world to worry about language trivia.
So it’s not about word nerds’ delusions of superiority. We feel
like anachronisms, displaced in a world of shifting values and priorities.
We live in an idealized past. We each have our own preferred era, be it the
time of Shakespeare or Swift or Dickens or Twain or Shaw, when people read
a lot more and savored the mot juste.
Oh, and everyone you knew could write, spell, and punctuate, and felt
enriched by a good vocabulary.
Anyway, onward to this week’s entries of infamy…
Irregardless I’ve heard a lot of bright people say this nonsense
word, which results from confusing and combining regardless and irrespective. If people would just think about it, what’s
that dopey ir- doing tacked on? In technical terms, ir-
is an “initial negative particle.” So if
“irregardless” means anything, it means “not
regardless” when its hapless speaker is trying to say the exact
opposite.
Center around
The whole play centers around the consequences of ill-gotten gains.
This common, misbegotten expression results from the unhappy union of two
similar terms: center on and revolve around. Because the
phrases are roughly synonymous, if you use them both enough, they merge in
the mind. What’s annoying about “center around” is that
it’s imprecise, and disheartens readers who take writing seriously.
The center is the point in the middle. How, exactly, would something center
around? You get dizzy trying to picture it.
Hone in This is another mongrel, like the two that preceded it. It’s
the brain-dead combo of hone and home in. We simply
can’t allow confusion to be the basis of acceptable changes in the
language. In recent years, “hone in” has achieved an undeserved
legitimacy for the worst of reasons: the similarity, in sound and
appearance, of n and m. Honing is a technique
used for sharpening cutting tools and the like. To home in, like zero in, is to get something firmly in your sights: get to the
crux of a problem.
Reticent This trendy word properly means “uncommunicative,”
“reserved,” “silent.” But sophisticates who like to
fancy up their mundane blather are now using it when they mean
“reluctant.” I was reticent to spend so much on a football game. When I hear
something like that, I wish the speaker would just reticent the heck up.
Allude Allude to means mention indirectly. In one of its most
unspeakable moves, Webster’s lists refer as a synonym.
Horrors! When you refer to something, it’s a direct
transaction: I refer to Section II, paragraph one, Your Honor.
When you allude to something or someone, you don’t come out
and say it; you’re being subtle, sly or sneaky: “Someone I know
better wise up.”
Off (of) “Hey! You! Get off of my cloud,” sang the Rolling
Stones, unnecessarily. The of is extraneous, and off of
is what’s known as a pleonasm. That means: starting now,
avoid it.
Couple (of) Hey, gimme a couple bucks, wouldja? When I was a kid,
this is how neighborhood tough guys talked, while cracking their chewing
gum. Don’t drop the of; one more little syllable won’t
kill you.
—Tom Stern
|
View and comment on this article on our website.
|
|
Free BONUS Quiz for You!
[[firstname]], because you are a subscriber to the newsletter, you get access to one of the Subscribers-Only Quizzes. Click here to take a To vs. Too vs. Two Quiz and get your scores and explanations instantly!
We will be adding many more quizzes this year to our already substantial list of quizzes. If you have suggestions for topics we have not yet covered, please send us a message at help@grammarbook.com.
|
Hundreds of Additional Quizzes at Your Fingertips
Subscribe now to receive hundreds of additional English usage quizzes not found anywhere else!
Teachers and Employers
Save hours of valuable time! You may assign quizzes to your students and employees and have their scores tallied, organized, and reported to you! Let GrammarBook.com take the hassle out of teaching English!
"Fun to test my skills."
"The explanations really help ... thanks!"
"I can select the quizzes to assign to my students, and then the results are reported to me automatically!"
|
Don't need all the quizzes?
You can now purchase the same quizzes individually for ONLY 99¢ each.
Purchase yours here. |
If you think you have found an error in a quiz, please email us at help@grammarbook.com
|
|
The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation
by Jane Straus, Lester Kaufman, and Tom Stern |
The Authority on English Grammar! Eleventh Edition Now Available
An indispensable tool for busy professionals, teachers, students, homeschool families, editors, writers, and proofreaders.
Available in print AND as an e-Book! Over 2,000 copies are purchased every month!
The publisher of The Blue Book, Jossey-Bass, A Wiley brand, is offering a 35 percent discount for those of you who order the book through Wiley.com. Shipping and tax are not included. Simply go to bit.ly/1996hkA and use discount code E9X4A.
Offer expires December 31, 2018.
|
Wordplay
|
|
English In A Snap: 68 One-Minute English Usage Videos FREE |
Learn all about who and whom, affect and effect, subjects and verbs, adjectives and adverbs, commas, semicolons, quotation marks, and much more by just sitting back and enjoying these easy-to-follow lessons. Tell your colleagues (and boss), children, teachers, and friends. Click here to watch.
|
|