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Plough Through Enough Dough to Make You Cough or Hiccough | Linguistics, Frankly

June 9, 2015 | Filed under: James Harbeck

You want some tough spelling for an English learner to plough through? Head to ough. There are six different ways it can be said at the end of a word, as in plough, through, dough, enough, cough and (for those who spell it that way) hiccough. (Never mind the versions …

Golden trophy

Wasted Words: A Compulsion to Exaggerate

February 24, 2015 | Filed under: Wilf Popoff

Frank McKenna, a San Diego photographer, complains that all photos displayed on the web are described as stunning. “What’s going on here?” he asks. “When did every picture become stunning?” McKenna sees this as word inflation. I agree to a point. Certainly it’s almost insulting nowadays to simply say something …

Quebec City

English Editing in Quebec: Local Realities — Quebec City and Area, and Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean

February 17, 2015 | Filed under: Dwain Richardson

♪♫ À Québec au clair de lune. Comme il fait bon… ♪♫ On those first few words of Marius Delisle’s 1959 hit, I make my way to Quebec City and the surrounding area to find out how language professionals fare with English on a daily basis. Of the more than …

Hand holding compass

Whom Do You Believe? | Linguistics, Frankly

January 20, 2015 | Filed under: James Harbeck

First of all: If you can avoid using whom, you should. Any but the most formal texts are better off without it; it’s a foreign word for most users, as evidenced by the general inability of even many language professionals to use it quite correctly all the time. Sometimes, however, …

Hand writing question mark

What’s an Editor to Do?

January 6, 2015 | Filed under: Victoria Neufeldt

The vagaries of language can cause even the most experienced editors headaches. Editors as a group are more attuned to the whims and ways of language than the average speaker, but many strange and challenging usages regularly fly under the radar and pass into public text, despite our best efforts. …

Ottawa River and City of Gatineau

English Editing in Quebec: Local Realities — Western Quebec and Eastern Townships

December 16, 2014 | Filed under: Dwain Richardson

If you live in the vicinity of Canada’s capital region and are aspiring to become a language professional, you’re in for a treat. For starters, the cities of Gatineau and Ottawa and their surrounding areas are home to most federal government departments. Localities on either side of the Ottawa River …

Path through snowy trees

Wasted Words: The Elements and Style

December 2, 2014 | Filed under: Wilf Popoff

It’s the time of year when heeding weather reports is a good idea: setting out with meagre insulation can be foolhardy. (News flash: “Hypothermia Blamed When Editor Vanishes.”) I glean data from all sources and sally forth properly kitted, but meteorological claptrap can be irritating. A local CBC station announces …

English test

What’s English? | Linguistics, Frankly

November 12, 2014 | Filed under: James Harbeck

Here’s a quick quiz. Tell me which of the following are English and which aren’t. For each one, say why it is or isn’t English and, if it’s not, what language it is. There’s no place to plug your car in in the parkade. A wha dat dey dem people …

Montreal skyline at night

English Editing in Quebec: Local Realities — Montreal and Area

October 21, 2014 | Filed under: Dwain Richardson

It’s a well-known fact: Quebec is the only French-language province in Canada. According to recent statistics, la belle province is home to over eight million inhabitants.[1] Of these inhabitants, 78 per cent are native French speakers and over seven per cent are English speakers. In the Greater Montreal Area, 47 …

Tattered death flag

Getting Rid of Death

September 23, 2014 | Filed under: Wilf Popoff

Okay, I understand. Most of us simply do not want to die. And over the last two centuries the western world has managed to postpone the occasion: we’ve doubled our lifespan. Postponement, however, is not eradication. Die we must, eventually, although there now appears to be a workaround. Many people …

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