Blog Archives

That or which? or both?

This gallery contains 2 photos.

Elsewhere in this blog (search for: “A which hunt”), I referred to the different prescriptions for usage of which and that in British and American English. The American advice to “use that before a restrictive clause and which before everything else” suggests that that is … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , | 1 Comment

1st BtUnB Lunch Lecture

This gallery contains 1 photo.

Working with WordSmith Tools As the first in a regular lecture series we will be organising, the project Bridging the Unbridgeable offers a demonstration of the concordancing program WordSmith Tools, designed by Mike Scott from theUniversity of Liverpool. This program … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged | Leave a comment

Starting a sentence with and?

This gallery contains 1 photo.

In a recent blog, the question was raised when objections against sentences starting with a conjunction were first formulated, and one of the commenters, Steven Leefers, suggested it must have been around the Interbellum.  So thanks to Steven for sorting … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged | 1 Comment

Could of?

This gallery contains 3 photos.

One of my (British) colleagues the other day mentioned that his sixteen-year-old daughter was very much surprised to learn that of in could of was not a preposition but an auxiliary verb. (For clarity’s sake, the girl’s father is a linguist and … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Far from the madding gerund …

This gallery contains 1 photo.

… is the title of a book by Mark Liberman and Geoffrey K. Pullum, published in 2006.  Based on their blog Language Log, it contains items on English usage but also topics that “might provoke a good laugh or draw … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Real-time global English

This gallery contains 4 photos.

A little while ago we received an e-mail from the Collins Language Team with the request to review the beta version of their new free online dictionary. Although this is clearly part of a strategy of buzz marketing, I am … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Likely, adverb or adjective?

This gallery contains 3 photos.

I’m currently reading James Pennebaker’s book The Secret Life of Pronouns (Bloomsbury Press, 2011): fascinating and intriguing, and I find myself nervously watching my own pronoun use as I write (too many first person pronouns already in this first sentence to … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , , , , | 15 Comments

Thusly is not a word?

Recently, one of my tutors pointed out my use of thusly in an essay. I used it thus: (except I would have added -ly there). Frankly, I was surprised to see it. Thusly was not a conscious choice during composition. … Continue reading

More Galleries | 19 Comments

Unlearning your mother tongue

This gallery contains 1 photo.

In a short story called “Mother Tongue” (2001), Ian McEwan writes about his efforts at acquiring standard English, a variety he had not learnt at home. As a result of his reading novels by Iris Murdoch and Graham Greene, [s]lowly, … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Jane Austen trying and …

This gallery contains 1 photo.

One of our readers mentioned Jane Austen in relation to an earlier post on the recommendation to avoid try and in favour of try to. Searching the novels for “try and” I found one instance, in Emma: I shall try … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , , | Leave a comment