Virginia raises some great points and would love to hear what rules YOU IGNORE š
As I noted a few posts ago, in his article āThe Phenomenology of Error,ā Joseph Williams categorized errors by type. Among his more interesting categories, in my view, were those errors that the experts make even as telling us not to (and nobody notices). He also had a category of grammatically correct constructions that sound so odd when we use them that we generally prefer the error.
These categories change with time, since language and usage do, of course. But his discussion of them made me think about the kinds of errors we can and maybe should ignore and, in fact, the kinds of rules we should ignore.
Here are three of my ārules I can ignoreā (if I want to). Do you agree with me on these? What are yours?
The āthat/whichā distinction.
Okay, I donāt ignore it, but from what Iāve seen, a whole lotā¦
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Thanks, Chris, for this helpful and interesting information. š
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Welcome Suzanne š
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I ignore quite a few. I enjoy taking “poetic license” š
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Good for you Tina š
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Well, as an editor, I know that the distinction between who/whom is fading away, so I don’t correct it in dialogue. I don’t have a huge problem with which/that—I have a bigger problem with that/who! “The policeman that pulled out his gun…” No, it should be “The policeman WHO pulled out his gun…” š
And I don’t have a problem with the singular they. š
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Bravo for this comment! Can’t believe the number of things I’ve ready lately using ‘that’ instead of ‘who’.
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Thanks, Chris, for reblogging this. I enjoyed this immensely and came up with a lengthy answer at Virginia’s blog.
Mostly I have trouble with someone who uses a singular they for themself (and no, I don’t mean “themselves” — I’m talking about a gender-fluid individual who does not like either “he” or “she” and instead goes by “they” despite being one singular person.) That is what trips me up the most, though I try to be sensitive to it as I have a sweet transgender romance coming out before the end of the year.
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That’s another great point Barb – BTW Don’t forget to send me the new book details so I can promo it when it comes out š
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I’ll be glad to. Still waiting on cover art for “A Little Elfy in Big Trouble.” And “Changing Faces” will probably be out in November.
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Three rules I frequently break!
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Glad to hear it Noelle š š š
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Thanks for the reblog! I see I’m not alone in finding that some rules are more trouble than they’re worth. Ain’t grammar fun?
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Yep! š š š
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Whoa ! Very informative !
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