Username
Skeeter Lewis
Member Since
March 16, 2012
Total number of comments
165
Total number of votes received
210
Bio
Latest Comments
obliged or obligated?
- October 25, 2012, 3:52pm
The words 'oblige' and 'obligate' both have a long history but the simple fact is that the Americans seem to prefer 'obligate' and the British 'oblige'.
It is not only I who think....
You are saying, "I think so-and -so and I am not the only one."
Capitalizing After the Colon
- July 21, 2012, 8:26pm
Yes - nice point, D.A. I should have learned by now never to say 'never', although titles fall under a different category.
At the moment I am reading 'Cuba Libre' by that master of stripped-down English, Elmore Leonard. I do believe I came across a semi-colon. Hallelujah!
Skeeter
Capitalizing After the Colon
- March 16, 2012, 3:02am
Capitalization is never used, under any circumstances whatsoever, after a colon or a semi-colon in British English.
Questions
Medicine or Medication? | October 27, 2012 |
What’s happening to the Passive? | July 30, 2014 |
The 1900s | June 11, 2015 |
obliged or obligated?
I was about to suggest that Americans enjoy the fancy longer word, for example 'burglarize' instead of 'burgle' but then I realised that we Brits say 'acclimatise' and Americans say 'acclimate'. So I won't.
Yes - I do know there is inconsistency in the spelling above between 'realised', 'burglarized' and 'acclimatized' but that is another kettle of Anglo-American fish...