Good/Bad English
- Greg Breed
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Good/Bad English
I recently came across a sentence i thought was incorrect, but after having looked up the word I am uncertain. I know the chess bunch are usually quite verbose and articulate so I thought here is as good a place as any to ask.
What was written:
...sold Elite services as appose to Pay-as-you-go service...
What I thought it should be:
...sold Elite services as opposed to Pay-as-you-go service...
What was written:
...sold Elite services as appose to Pay-as-you-go service...
What I thought it should be:
...sold Elite services as opposed to Pay-as-you-go service...
Hatch End A Captain (Hillingdon League)
Controller (Hillingdon League)
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Re: Good/Bad English
A google search came up with this linkGreg Breed wrote: What was written:
...sold Elite services as appose to Pay-as-you-go service...
What I thought it should be:
...sold Elite services as opposed to Pay-as-you-go service...
http://www.beedictionary.com/common-err ... _vs_oppose
appose is a very rare word. Those with memories of old TV programs might recall the programme "Call my Bluff" where three possible definitions of a rare word were given and the teams attempted to use the correct one.
Re: Good/Bad English
Of course, nowadays nobody is supposed to be opposed to anything. Hence the use of substitutes like 'appose'. How very apposite. Personally, I'm against it.
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Re: Good/Bad English
If we're really going to have a thread entitled "Good/Bad English", then...
*programmesRoger de Coverly wrote:Those with memories of old TV programs might recall the programme "Call my Bluff"[...].
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Re: Good/Bad English
Programme. Used as a collective noun for a series, as in "Do you remember the TV programme The Good Life ?". Programmes in this context means distinct series, as in "Paul Eddington was in the programmes The Good Life and Yes Minister".Alex Holowczak wrote: *programmes
Re: Good/Bad English
Is it not simply an instance of American English spelling and if so is that bad?
BTW, bad words about a certain English footballer have appeared in the Spanish media. They've never really forgiven the English for the darstardly deeda of Drake - such as singeing the beard of their king.
BTW, bad words about a certain English footballer have appeared in the Spanish media. They've never really forgiven the English for the darstardly deeda of Drake - such as singeing the beard of their king.
Last edited by John McKenna on Tue Feb 12, 2013 5:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Good/Bad English
No, Roger, not there.Roger de Coverly wrote:Programme. Used as a collective noun for a series, as in "Do you remember the TV programme The Good Life ?". Programmes in this context means distinct series, as in "Paul Eddington was in the programmes The Good Life and Yes Minister".Alex Holowczak wrote: *programmes
ThereRoger de Coverly wrote:Those with memories of old TV programs might recall the programme "Call my Bluff" [...]
Re: Good/Bad English
Alex hasn't spotted my spelling error as yet. Heh, heh... (in a Mutley voice).
- MJMcCready
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Re: Good/Bad English
Go into any supermarket in England and you will see a sign near some of the tills '10 items or less' when it should be '10 items or fewer' given that 'less' is used for nouns which we don't count 'uncountable nouns' and fewer is used for nouns we do count 'countable nouns'.
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Re: Good/Bad English
On the other hand.MJMcCready wrote:Go into any supermarket in England and you will see a sign near some of the tills '10 items or less' when it should be '10 items or fewer' given that 'less' is used for nouns which we don't count 'uncountable nouns' and fewer is used for nouns we do count 'countable nouns'.
I agree with you rather than Pocket Fowler, though.Pocket Fowler's Modern English Usage wrote:Supermarket checkouts are correct when the signs they display read 5 items or less (which refers to a total amount), and are misguidedly pedantic when they read 5 items or fewer (which emphasizes individuality, surely not the intention).
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Re: Good/Bad English
I'm pleased to report my local Waitrose uses "10 items or fewer". However, they then totally ruined it by referring to "cancer cure's" on the box where you put the green token to decide which charity gets most funding.
What constitutes an item? I recall Robbie Coltrane (possibly in 'Cracker') using the "8 items or fewer" aisle with about 24 cans of beer, pointing out, "4 cans of beer in a pack - one item".
What constitutes an item? I recall Robbie Coltrane (possibly in 'Cracker') using the "8 items or fewer" aisle with about 24 cans of beer, pointing out, "4 cans of beer in a pack - one item".
- John Clarke
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Re: Good/Bad English
If the 4-pack has a single price covering all four cans, requiring only one read of a bar-code, then to my mind it's a single "item", and Robbie C was right.Kevin Thurlow wrote:What constitutes an item? I recall Robbie Coltrane (possibly in 'Cracker') using the "8 items or fewer" aisle with about 24 cans of beer, pointing out, "4 cans of beer in a pack - one item".
I've read it through several times, and even slept on it overnight, but I still can't make any sense of that extract from Pocket Fowler. It reads more like something that the old Fowler's reviser Ernest Gowers would have quoted in his own Plain Words as an example of how not to write intelligible English.
"The chess-board is the world ..... the player on the other side is hidden from us ..... he never overlooks a mistake, or makes the smallest allowance for ignorance."
(He doesn't let you resign and start again, either.)
(He doesn't let you resign and start again, either.)
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Re: Good/Bad English
I'm glad I'm not the only one.John Clarke wrote: I've read it through several times, and even slept on it overnight, but I still can't make any sense of that extract from Pocket Fowler. It reads more like something that the old Fowler's reviser Ernest Gowers would have quoted in his own Plain Words as an example of how not to write intelligible English.
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Re: Good/Bad English
My crude understanding from my letter writing days is that less takes the singular noun and fewer the plural, so less chance, fewer chances, less resource, fewer resources. Fewer is used when we talk about a figure five items or fewer, fewer potatoes. Whereas less is concerned with an amount so less water or less sugar. But someone may wish to correct me? They usually do!Richard James wrote:I'm glad I'm not the only one.John Clarke wrote: I've read it through several times, and even slept on it overnight, but I still can't make any sense of that extract from Pocket Fowler. It reads more like something that the old Fowler's reviser Ernest Gowers would have quoted in his own Plain Words as an example of how not to write intelligible English.
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Re: Good/Bad English
Essentially, yes, but, for instance, if you wanted a smaller helping of mash you'd ask for less potatoes rather than fewer potatoes, because you're talking about mass rather than number.David Gilbert wrote:My crude understanding from my letter writing days is that less takes the singular noun and fewer the plural, so less chance, fewer chances, less resource, fewer resources. Fewer is used when we talk about a figure five items or fewer, fewer potatoes. Whereas less is concerned with an amount so less water or less sugar. But someone may wish to correct me? They usually do!Richard James wrote:I'm glad I'm not the only one.John Clarke wrote: I've read it through several times, and even slept on it overnight, but I still can't make any sense of that extract from Pocket Fowler. It reads more like something that the old Fowler's reviser Ernest Gowers would have quoted in his own Plain Words as an example of how not to write intelligible English.
The problem is that 'more' is the antonym of both words.
"Alex made more serious mistakes than Jack" is ambiguous. It might be the opposite of "Alex made less serious mistakes than Jack" or "Alex made fewer serious mistakes than Jack".