Get Reviews! discussion

17 views
Discussion > Lacking vocabulary

Comments Showing 1-12 of 12 (12 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by David (last edited May 03, 2022 07:17AM) (new)

David Rose | 104 comments More and more often I run into words which the author has constructed, quite unnecessarily, it would appear because they lack the vocabulary or adequate command of English.

Most often, an adjective is forcibly converted to a noun.
Some examples:
Peacefulness. The word the writer is struggling to find would be 'peace'. By way of illustration: 'She loved the peacefulness of the estuary in the evening.' Similarly, 'tactfulness' (tact), 'furiousness' (fury), 'enviousness' (envy).
Resentfulness. Already in existence and in general use: 'resentment'.
'Whimsicalness'. Or, 'whimsicality'?
'Mendaciousness.' i.e. 'mendacity'.

I think I've even seen 'innocentness' recently. Which would make the writer guilty of forgetting about 'innocence'.

What really bothers me, as an old fogey who doesn't like change, is that some of these now appear in dictionaries!
What is the world coming to?


message 2: by Michael (new)

Michael Gardner | 192 comments Yes, you are an old fogey.

But so am I. I'll order some jackets for the club.


message 3: by David (new)

David Rose | 104 comments Harrumph. I'm a 3XL.


message 4: by K.S. (new)

K.S. Ferguson | 72 comments Mod
But longer words (as in your examples) take more space, ie, more pages, and then you get paid for more page reads without actually writing more, right? ;)

I'm still struggling with 'they' as a gender pronoun. Because of my psychology background, when I hear 'they' used to describe a single human being, I immediately go to 'multiple personality disorder afflicted individual'. Please could we have a pronoun that isn't already in use to mean something completely different?

I'll take a size large.


message 5: by Michael (new)

Michael Gardner | 192 comments Okay, two 3XLs and one large. They only come in ultra-conservative navy blue, so those are your colour choices (credit to Henry Ford, it's not my idea.)

Okay, the club is open for old fogeys and wannabes.

What's getting me waving my pencil over the front lawn is the neglect for the use of tense verbs. Who gives a hoot about when events happen in time anymore?

You kids get off my writing lawn!


message 6: by David (new)

David Rose | 104 comments K.S. wrote: "But longer words (as in your examples) take more space, ie, more pages, and then you get paid for more page reads without actually writing more, right? ;)

I'm not convinced that's why they're doing it. But neither are you, right? ;)


message 7: by David (new)

David Rose | 104 comments K.S. wrote: "I'm still struggling with 'they' as a gender pronoun. Because of my psychology background, when I hear 'they' used to describe a single human being, I immediately go to 'multiple personality disorder afflicted individual'."

Don't feel alone, sister. Because I'm right there with you!


message 8: by David (last edited May 06, 2022 10:14AM) (new)

David Rose | 104 comments Michael wrote: "What's getting me waving my pencil over the front lawn is the neglect for the use of tense verbs."

Well... how about:
stab
agonise
blindfold
clench (teeth or bowels)
cocked (as in Alexander Rollins's revolver?)
dangle
strained...

no, wait. That's not what you meant, was it?

But that pencil is a great idea. (HB, 6B, or 3H?) Waving a mouse just doesn't have the same air of geriatric menace.


message 9: by Michael (new)

Michael Gardner | 192 comments Embrace the true spirit of Old Fogey. Use a green editing pencil. Work on paper. Refuse to use peripheral computer devices. Wave a real mouse at the transgressors of grammar (although they bite and you may get complaints from the SPCA).

Yes, indeed. The pen is mightier than the sword, but the green editing pencil is OP.


message 10: by David (new)

David Rose | 104 comments Don't underestimate the plain old HB. I still have a scar in the web between two fingers from my schooldays, circa 1973? (An irritated fellow scholar was aiming for the centre of my hand on his desk, but I moved it almost fast enough.)

To enhance the image, may I recommend an accountant's green eyeshade (aka 'dealer's visor') to go with the editing pencil?


message 11: by Kathleen (last edited May 07, 2022 05:49PM) (new)

Kathleen Garlock (kathykg) | 101 comments I agree. What's with wannabe writers creating words out of thin air?

Insisture. Wappened? Impeticos. Or my favorite: ribaudred!

That William Shakespeare should just drop his quill and take up a career where he can make a name for himself.

I like blue. And roomy. I'll take a size large, please.


message 12: by David (new)

David Rose | 104 comments Yesterday. 'Cruelness'. Aaaargh. Is there any way the internet allows one to smack the author through their ebook?

Obviously I'm not going to leave a bad review for a book with good plot, characterization, and generally good writing. But if I don't find a way to deal with my frustratedness soon, I'm going to need a better dentist.


back to top