Disusage presents the contradictions and foibles of usage manuals, style guides, and the quirky folks who love them. This week: “fiscal cliff” notwithstanding, we can still chuckle at the nonsense heritage of political labels.
Read MoreDisusage presents the contradictions and foibles of usage manuals, style guides, and the quirky folks who love them. This week: “fiscal cliff” notwithstanding, we can still chuckle at the nonsense heritage of political labels.
Read MoreThis year, I'm with the amateurs. I'm going to write 50,000 words in one month, and all the bad writing advice and literary snobbiness in the entire Internet isn't going to stop me. Here's how I'm going to do it.
[In honor of the publication of Louise Glück’s Poems 1962–2012]
Fifty years of poems from a poet not yet turned seventy, brimming with carefully articulated emotion beginning in taut observations —
Fish bones walked the waves off Hatteras.
And there were other signs ....
Disusage presents the contradictions and foibles of usage manuals, style guides, and the quirky folks who love them. This week: making use of “usage.”
usage, use, user. Those who write usage or user when they mean no more than use must be presumed to do so for one of two bad reasons: that they prefer either the longer word to the shorter (see LONG VARIANTS) or the unusual one to the common (see WORKING AND STYLISH WORDS). Usage implies a manner of using (e.g. harsh usage), especially of habitual or customary practice creating a right or standard (modern English usage). An example of its misuse is There is a serious shortage of X-ray films due to increasing usage in all countries. User is a legal word for use (exercise of a right) and should be left to the lawyers.
—Fowler’s Modern English Usage, 2nd edition, 1965
“No matter what Merriam-Webster says I will continue to keen histrionically about ‘usage.’ Just say use, I say.”
—Internet user Olli Baker, commenting on “When Words Were Worth Fighting Over,” an article by Geoff Nunberg on NPR’s website.
Have an aspect of usage you want examined? Email me.
Image: historic photo from the New York City Municipal Archive, via the Atlantic
If brevity is truly the soul of wit, then your Twitter feed is the Algonquin round table of today's digital Dorothy Parkers and Ogden Nashes. Here's a selection of our favorite tweets from the week; nominate yours by submitting to @blackballoonpub with #twitwit.
Read MoreDisusage presents the contradictions and foibles of usage manuals, style guides, and the quirky folks who love them. This week: bullshit (or, if you will, "malarkey") slang.
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