From the Grammar Police

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Open Saseme!

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Will the apostrophe gremlin’s never stop?

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A bad apostrophe, a homophone and a comma splice. Three for one! Grammar is at it’s all time low and good writing is worth more then you think, call me. (Plus, it should be “all-time.”)

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Newspaper copy desks have a tough job. Editors have to write headlines that fit in an unnatural space and also make sense. Sometimes they, well, fall short. We had to look at this one for a while to figure out what it was saying. The story said a proposal by Poland for restitution to victims of the Holocaust made it too hard for them to reclaim property seized by the Nazis, and the United States government and Jewish groups were outraged. Hard to fit all that in two columns and three rows (“decks” in newspaper lingo). It didn't help that "limits," which really needed to go next to "restitution," went to the third line. Changing "outrage" to "outrages" would have done the trick, but it didn't fit. How about:

Poland’s bid to limit
Holocaust restitution
outrages US, Jews

Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong" features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

Haven’t signed up for our newsletter yet? Do it now! And tell your friends!

NOTE: Eliot and Lou Ann are available for speaking engagements, and can travel. Reach us through the comments section. Just think of all of your employees getting back to work on a Monday, their heads filled with all the ways we’ve shown them to be better communicators!

From the Grammar Police

What’s missing in this picture?

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Carl Spackler needed an 8-iron. And this headline needs an apostrophe: “Golfers’ Paradise.”

Or steps.

Submitted by Scott Simmons

Submitted by Scott Simmons

These guys really puntured our confidence!

Submitted by Tom Peeling

Submitted by Tom Peeling

Keep this in mind when you plan to retur!

Submitted by Andrea Bivens

Submitted by Andrea Bivens

Hope you won’t have a problem with the vinager and have to retur it!

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Wouldn’t you you like to earn earn an extra extra three hundred dollars bucks? I know I would would.

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The name of the town is Greenacres.

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The apostrophe gremlin’s strike again!

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What’s a paintie?

Bonus: We’re sympathetic to companies for whom English isn’t their first language. Can you find the mistakes below? Send to eliot@eliotkleinberg.com.

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Glass houses strike again! Our June 20 segment had a few typos, which some of our loyal readers promptly caught. Thank you and please accept our grovel.

Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong" features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

Haven’t signed up for our newsletter yet? Do it now! And tell your friends!

From the Grammar Police

Sign, sign, everywhere a sign!

Submitted by Becky Peeling

Submitted by Becky Peeling

Glad this hotel cleared up the difference between weekday and weekend hours!

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Only ninety-nine hundredths of a penny? What a deal!

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How close are you? Or maybe you’re closed for the day.

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Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong," features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

Haven’t signed up for our newsletter yet? Do it now! And tell your friends!

From the Grammar Police

(Submitted by Tom Peeling)

(Submitted by Tom Peeling)

Submitted by former TV reporter Curt Fonger, Daphne, Ala.:

"The police are still inside the building, along with the shooting victim who is still dead."

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Reminder: Memorial Day is not a happy day! It’s a day to remember our fallen military. How about, "Have a safe and enjoyable Memorial Day weekend." (And don’t say “Happy Good Friday” or “Happy Yom Kippur.” Those also are solemn commemorations.)

Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong," features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

Haven’t signed up for our newsletter yet? Do it now! And tell your friends!

From the Grammar Police

May is bad apostrophe’s month!

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Here are the answers to our half-baked “Steak Night” menu (it’s real) which featured a fricassee of bad grammar topped with a coulis of misspellings (See image below.)

  • Comma after “goat cheese.”

  • “Chopped Caesar salad.”

  • “Bibb”

  • “Tomatoes.”

  • “Onion rings.”

  • Comma after “onion rings.”

  • “Brushed with black truffle and green…”

  • Comma after “mango salsa.”

  • “Mushrooms.”

  • “Loaded baked potato.”

  • “Steamed broccoli.”

  • “Brussels.”

  • “Sun-dried tomatoes.”

Thanks for participating!

Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong," features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

From the Grammar Police

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You can be in a traffic jam, or eating bread and jam, but it’s a door jamb.

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“I’m afraid to look!” (Submitted by Tom Peeling)

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How can you go past “best?” Otherwise, this is fine. Oh! Wait! What’s a hogdog?

Readers: Find the mistakes on this menu! Provide name and hometown. Send to eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

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Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong," features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

From the Grammar Police

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"Something Went Horribly Wrong” features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

Segment 7: Lightning Bugs, Part Two

Photo by Ihor Malytskyi on Unsplash

Readers: Here are more examples in which the writer used almost the right word, and missed altogether.

1. Cities like Austin, Texas, are using some creativity and helping families find new ways to celebrate.

“Like” means “similar to.” Not “including.” Austin cannot be a city like Austin. Sacramento is a city like Austin. You want to say “a city such as Austin.”

2. He was feeling badly that his wife’s surgery was going bad..

You “feel badly” if you lose sensation in your fingers. The rest of the time, you feel bad that the surgery is going badly.

3. The embattled governor’s staff became beleaguered.

“Beleaguered” means beset. “Embattled” does not. It means to be prepared for battle.

4. Flags will fly at half-mast today in honor of the late mayor

No. “Half-mast” for ships. “Half-staff” for buildings. Early in his career, Eliot regularly got this wrong, and Lou Ann would have to fix it.

5.  First annual pageant

For now, you don’t know whether there will be a second annual. So just say something such as, “the pageant, whose organizers hope will be an annual event.”

6. Families are wracking their brains out to plan for holiday gatherings.

Racking. And not “racking out.” “To go to wrack and ruin” means to fall into a state of decay or destruction, so the optics of people “wracking their brains out” is pretty horrific.

7. A search is underway for a possible sailor overboard.

A possible sailor went overboard? We’re guessing he definitely was a sailor. How about “a sailor possibly overboard.”

8. The program will pump 6 to 9 million dollars into new construction.

It’s actually 6 million to 9 million. We’re guessing the number didn’t start with six dollars.

9. NASA is launching a telescope and a balloon the size of a football stadium into the stratosphere so researchers can study the formation of stars. The telescope, named ASTHROS, measures at 8.4 feet and the balloon carrying the device is 400 feet wide.

At 400 feet, it's longer than a football FIELD. If it was the size of a football stadium, we'd like to see a rocket get it off the ground.

10. "The murder-for-hire trial of a slain Florida State university professor came to an end Friday afternoon with a guilty verdict..."

Bad enough he was dead. Then his corpse has to go on trial for his own murder!

Watch this on video! https://youtu.be/y_fMjkAs1i4

Next time: Clichés. Avoid ‘em like the plague.

Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong," features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

From the Grammar Police

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Cattle and dairy cows can be grass-fed. Beef and milk aren’t fed. How about “We believe happy grassfed cows make the best milk.”

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This horrible, and common, misuse of comma-separated phrases will be the subject of a future segment. It needs to be, “One ton of paper consumes 17 trees and three cubic yards of landfill space and pollutes 7,000 gallons of water.”

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Cliché alert!

Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong," features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com

From the Grammar Police

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Beginners’ Guide…

Congratulations. You made it!

(Submitted by Margaret Vogel)

(Submitted by Margaret Vogel)

Did he commit the murder in the attic or get caught in the attic? (It was the latter)

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Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong," features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com.

NOTE: Eliot and Lou Ann are available for speaking engagements, and can travel. Reach us through the comments section. Just think of all of your employees getting back to work on a Monday, their heads filled with all the ways we’ve shown them to be better communicators!

Segment 4: Oxymorons for morons

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Readers: Because our language is not perfect, words have, for a variety of reasons, become twisted so that people now use them in ways different or even opposite from their intended meaning. Each of these sentences uses the word wrong at least once, and sometimes both times. Remember, it’s all about clarity! If people aren’t sure what you mean, you have failed as a communicator.

1. Denny’s impacted tooth impacted his quality of life.

The impacted tooth is OK. But repeat after us: “Impact is not a verb. Impact is not a verb. Impact is not a verb!” OK, the dictionary disagrees, but trust us. It’s jargon.

2. The immigrants gazed hopefully toward America. Hopefully, they got there. Later, the immigrants thankfully kissed the ground. Thankfully, they’d survived the dangerous journey.

These are all-star goofs. In both cases, the first reference is wrong. While you can hopefully look toward America, “hopefully” does NOT mean “It’s hoped that…” And you can thankfully kiss the ground, but “thankfully” does not mean the world is thankful.

3. The train will be stopping momentarily, but it will be stopping momentarily.

“Momentarily” means “for a moment,” not “in a moment.” If your plane is landing “momentarily,” that’s bad! “Wait,” you say. “Context makes this clear.” Not always. In the example we gave, you’re not sure whether you’re being told that the train is about to stop, or that the stop will be brief. Important if that’s your stop.

4. Hollywood director Spike Jones filmed the debate live, but also filmed it.

It can be argued “film” has gone the way of “dialing the phone.” No one physically turns a dial on a phone anymore, so the evolution of that word isn’t a problem. But “filming” refers to recording something on actual film, and some people still are doing that. “Taped” no longer works either as a colloquial, since virtually nothing is recorded on magnetic tape, but, rather, on memory cards. Say, “recorded” or “shot.” You certainly don’t film something live. You broadcast or stream it live.

5. Make sure you have plenty of funds in your fund.

A fund is a bank account. Money is not “funds.”

6. I finished my dentist's appointment and made an appointment for my next appointment.

Your visit to the doctor is not an appointment. It’s a visit. An appointment is something you mark in your calendar. Substitute “reservation” for “appointment” and you see how it doesn’t work.

7. Police will not identify the person killed in the crash, although they have identified him.

Don’t say police haven’t identified the person. Unless they say otherwise, they know exactly who it is. They just, for whatever reason, don’t want to tell the public yet. Say, “Police will not name the person killed in the crash.”

8  The deadly bomb caused a deadly explosion.

“Deadly” means having the potential to kill. A missile heading toward a plane is deadly, but a plane crash isn’t deadly. No potential to speak of. It already happened.

9. Falling between the cracks.

Besides being another brutal cliché, it’s wrong. Things fall through the cracks. The part between the cracks is the floor. Nothing will fall through that.

Watch this on video! https://youtu.be/_2-c0SVy67w

Next time: Homophones

Readers: "Something Went Horribly Wrong," features samples of bad writing we see nearly every day. You can participate! Be our duly deputized “grammar police:” Your motto: “To protect and correct.” Send in your photos of store signs, street signs, newspaper headlines, tweets, and so on. It doesn’t have to be a grammatical error. It can be just what we call “cowardly writing.” Include your name and home town so we properly can credit you. You're free to add a comment, although we reserve the right to edit or omit. Now get out there! Send to Eliot@eliotkleinberg.com