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Hyphen when combining an open coumpound with a participle as in a White
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The Gregg Reference Manual does recommend using an en dash instead of a "foreign exchange" when we mean foreign exchangerelated? Should an en dash be used after open compounds?įor example, should an en dash be used instead of a hyphen after words such as See our definitions for linking verbs and intranstive verbs, and learn the kinds of verbs that can be regarded as linking. If you wanted to, you could regard linking verbs as a kind of intransitive verb, but the definitions really don't have that much to do with one another and the distinction is worth keeping straight in your head. Intransitive verbs? If linking verbs are intransitive what is the correct I homeschool my son and in the course of covering "linking" verbs and So just get rid of the first verb and say "He continues to serve this organization well".

You could say "He has served and continues to serve this organization well," but doesn't the word "continues" sort of suggest that he's been doing this for a while anyway. No, that has definite problems in parallel form. Raleigh, North Carolina Sun, Feb 24, 2002 He has and continues to serve this organization well.
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"Welcomed" will emphasize the process of being made welcomeloud shouts of hello, smiles all around, slaps on the back, offers of free drinks, etc. Close/closed, however, won't work that way if for no other reason than the adjective close has come to mean something else, something other than "not open." It means near by, so we can't say "the window is close." Open/opened, though, works sort of like welcome/welcomed. "Opened" will stress a bit more the process by which the window became other than closed (i.e., someone opened it). You can use either the adjective open or the participle opened, and mean pretty much the same thing. Please let me know what is the right way to say, I think we have to say it is If I hear correctly, people say "the window is open" But they say "it is closed." Is the window open(ed) or it is close(d)? Used with the permission of Oxford University Press. and the least common."Īuthority: The New Fowler's Modern English Usage edited by R.W. Constructions with consider as seem to be the least favored. I am aware that it is possible to use 'as'Īfter 'regard', but 'consider' should normally be followed by a noun or 'to be'.īurchfield notes that in the twentieth century, various writers on usage have expressed reservations about the use of consider as to mean "regard as being." He goes on to say that the choice "does not seem to be based on particular rules, but rather on the nature of the surrounding words. The sentence comesįrom a section discussing the usage of 'majority', but I am interested in how the Wordmaster Dictionary I came upon a sentence like this: 'When the group isĬonsidered AS a number of individuals, a plural is used'. Assuming that one can go both ways in this heated corridor, it might have been better to say that the corridor simply connects the two points or that it runs between the two points.
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That series of three prepositional phrases, though, does make the sentence a bit hard to follow, I must admit.

I can get to Washington Street from the parking lot next to the Delft Theatre by means of a heated corridor which sounds kind of handy on a February day in northern Michigan. I don't know if there's an actual rule broken in this sentence, but I can't imagine why the writer of this sentence would want to invert the normal subject-verb-object order of "you'll find this worthwhile." The initial adverb clause would also suggest that the first thing that comes along in the main clause would be the subject "you." But that peculiar inversion, with "this" coming first, is the main problem.Ī heated corridor provides access to Washington Street from the Main Street

More than fingernails on a chalkboard! What grammatical rule does it break? Manitowoc County, this you'll find worthwhile." The sentence irritates me

In the U.S., we'd say "is."Ī radio ad uses the sentence "If you live or work in Yes, they would say that team names take plural verbs in the UK (or so I've been told). You must be listening to a British broadcast. Say that 'England is playing against Mexico next spring.'? 'England are playing Mexico next spring.' Is it good grammar? Would it be equally or more appropriate to Listening to sports news or events we often hear commentors say things like: The Grammar Logs - Number Four Hundred, Eighty-Two The
