Sarah Sarah’s Comments (group member since May 05, 2008)


Sarah’s comments from the Language & Grammar group.

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Aug 26, 2015 12:41PM

2740 Regarding 'afterward' vs 'afterwards,' I find this with most -ward(s) suffixes: toward, upward, forward, westward, etc. I was pretty random about it, but I think without the -s is the preferred spelling in general. I know my editor nixes it.
Mar 16, 2015 01:03PM

2740 I've decided to stay far away from lavish, except as an adjective, as in "a lavish buffet." I'm glad I had a moment of doubt and asked. Otherwise I'd be sending off an essay with a dumb flub in it. :)

I think in the phrase "languish in" the "in" is a plain old preposition, e.g. "she languished in jail for 5 years."
Mar 16, 2015 04:31AM

2740 Thanks very much. I must be confusing it with "languish in."
Mar 16, 2015 03:49AM

2740 I have a question about using "lavish in" as a verb. Is this correct: "I lavished in reading a book set in the same landscape where I found myself."

I dislike the word "relish" and "savor" seems ordinary. I do prefer "to lavish in" but get the feeling I'm making it up...

Thanks for any advice.
Sarah
Aug 25, 2014 05:34AM

2740 Thanks Stephen - I also wonder if "try" should be capitalized?
Aug 25, 2014 04:26AM

2740 Hi -
Grammar & punctuation conundrum. What's right here? Thankful for any grammatical guru's advice.

“I tell people, 'try waitressing and you’ll feel differently about working here,'” she said.

or

"I tell people try waitressing and you'll feel differently about working here," she said.

or

"I tell people, try waitressing and you'll feel differently about working here," she said.
Feb 10, 2014 11:36AM

2740 I loved The Things They Carried, too. Great beginning, and sustained.

I'm reading, among other things, Seriously Funny: Poems about Love, Death, Religion, Art, Politics, Sex, and Everything Else, a book of (sometimes) funny poems about serious matters.
Word Associations (35842 new)
May 20, 2013 01:39AM

2740 that mean mannish boy
Mar 02, 2013 01:31PM

2740 Vico was the guy who was what?
Feb 21, 2013 01:09PM

2740 That's interesting, that "what" is always singular! Perhaps it sounds weird because we expect flexibility as we do with "who" and "that."
Thanks for the input. Personally I will continue to skirt the problem.
smile
Feb 21, 2013 12:43PM

2740 Thanks, Mark.
At the same time "that" and "what" refer back to people, just as "who" would, and the verb that goes with "who" is flexible, depending on whether the referent is singular or plural.
"They are the ones who eat shrimp."
"He is the one who eats shrimp."

It cannot be correct that in the first sentence I should use "eats."

These are the factories that pollute the air.
This is the factory that pollutes the air.

Am I mixing apples and oranges?

still confused....
Feb 21, 2013 12:26PM

2740 That's the sentence as I got it, without request to change. (I agree it's nice to bypass the problem and not decide what's correct but so it is.) I trust my grammar but don't pretend to be an expert - I would think the "what" represents the embedded "the thing that," so "makes" is correct. YET it sounds really wrong.
Feb 21, 2013 10:51AM

2740 OH GRAMMAR GODS, I got this question from a friend and began to answer with great certainty and was suddenly racked by doubt.

"I have a stylistic question that has been bugging me: "People are what make it special" or "People are what makes it special" "make" or "makes"? neither sounds right to me...

I was going to say "make" since "are" is the main verb agreeing with "people." Right?
Nov 28, 2012 10:27PM

2740 Newengland wrote: "I'm omniscient --
Who are You? --
Are you Omniscient,
Too?"


Hi, Omnisicient,
How are you?
Nov 27, 2012 10:37AM

2740 Laugh. Love your reply, Ruth. I agree. And Carol, yes, if I just throw an exclamation point there, I won't have a problem.
Doug, I've never done it that way -with a comma- but see the comma used increasingly. Thus my perplexity.
Nov 27, 2012 07:24AM

2740 Dear grammar experts,
When you write a letter or email starting with "Hi" or "Hello" and the person's name, do you use a comma after it, that is, which of these is correct:

Hi, John,
or
Hi John,

thanks
Literary Devices (17 new)
Jul 07, 2012 05:11AM

2740 Wuthering is a combination of 'wondering' and 'weathering.' Think of someone stumbling round the moors like an aimless windmill set loose. Or something.
May 24, 2012 09:52PM

2740 Thanks, all.
May 24, 2012 01:23AM

2740 you are right. thanks!
May 23, 2012 12:12PM

2740 Thanks for your help!
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