Username
Skeeter Lewis
Member Since
March 16, 2012
Total number of comments
165
Total number of votes received
210
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“ton” in the Victorian era
- March 26, 2013, 7:35am
'Ton' can mean either 'fashion' or 'people of fashion'. It's pronounced the French way with a muted 'n'.
Is there any defense of capitalizing after a semicolon?
- March 12, 2013, 1:38pm
Bucky, that rule doesn't obtain in British English. It looks a bit bizarre to us.
"Ten minutes later his secretary calls back: We've got face time with the president, guy named Walter Helfgott."
This line from an American thriller is, I suppose, standard in American English but not over here.
Is there any defense of capitalizing after a semicolon?
- February 8, 2013, 7:58am
Senior moment I'm afraid, Will. I was referring to colons, not semi-colons. After colons, capitalization is certainly creeping in.
Is there any defense of capitalizing after a semicolon?
- February 6, 2013, 12:59pm
Unfortunately, Will, capitalizing after a colon is creeping into British publishing. The reason may be transatlantic deals and the need for standardized conventions. The Americans, as the senior partners, tend to have the last word.
Is there any defense of capitalizing after a semicolon?
- February 6, 2013, 9:06am
Tome, as a Brit, capitals after a colon are barbarous.
optimiSe or optimiZe ?
- January 30, 2013, 11:51am
Thank you, Will. Very interesting. It's true I don't remember 'ize' in Dickens.....
O’clock
- January 26, 2013, 12:14pm
I'm pretty sure I've come across the usage 'a quarter of three' in the essays of Addison and Steele in the Spectator from the early eighteenth century.
hanged vs. hung
- January 25, 2013, 3:14am
Why make personal comments? I don't see the necessity.
Impact as a noun
- January 16, 2013, 1:55am
Noisenet - I'd say you were right, not your professor. Yes, it's true that people use gender to refer to people nowadays but traditionally gender is a grammarian's word that refers to words. In many languages - not, thank God, English - words have gender. People have sex. (When they're lucky).
Questions
Medicine or Medication? | October 27, 2012 |
What’s happening to the Passive? | July 30, 2014 |
The 1900s | June 11, 2015 |
“ton” in the Victorian era
The American word 'toney' meaning 'fashionable' is also derived from the French word 'ton'.