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Name: Ed Lilly
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Name: Disgruntled in NY
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A really creative band would have named itself Ghoti rather than Phish

From a news story on a proposal in Great Britain to do away with the notion that there are correct and incorrect spellings of words:

Playwright George Bernard Shaw was fond of pointing out that the word "ghoti" could just as well be pronounced "fish" if you followed common pronunciation: 'gh' as in "tough," 'o' as in "women" and 'ti' as in "nation."

The proposal does not seem to be getting any traction, but it's an amusing article all the same.  It seems to me that it would make teaching children to read and write all that much more difficult if you throw out the idea that there are right and wrong ways to spell a word.  But I would get tremendous satisfaction if one of my kids were clever enough to come with a spelling like Shaw's for fish and tried to get it past a teacher.
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Should the executive editor of the largest newspaper in the second largest city of the most powerful nation in history understand the difference between me, myself and I?

Granted, it's a little bit of a pet peeve of mine, but the following sentences from an email reportedly sent by the Executive Editor of the Los Angeles Times, Meredith Artley, really set my teeth on edge:

I should have first not encouraged posting on this topic, but if any of you feel that you have a post you really to write, to please discuss it with Tony and myself first since we must always tread carefully on unverified stories.

First, we're apparently missing the word "want" between "really" and "to write."  All right, it's an email. [Thanks to cakinli for the catch.]  It happens when you don't proofread.

Second, the word "to" following "to write," either needs to be removed, or the thought should be more fully expressed by writing something along the lines of, "we ask you to please discuss..."  Again, we'll give Ms. Artley the benefit of the doubt and chalk it up to email haste / sloppiness.

But "discuss it with Tony and myself..."?  Would you tell another person to "discuss it with myself" if you wanted them to discuss it with you?  How can you get to a position as the executive editor of a newspaper as large as the L.A. Times and still make this kind of mistake, even casually?  I have seen this same awful usage in several books recently as well, so perhaps there is a great shortage of competent editors throughout the publishing world.

Well, maybe it was just an isolated incident.  No.  The first sentence of the very next paragraph of Ms. Artley's email is as follows:

Russ, myself, Tony and all the editors you work with trust you guys to engage us in open and frank dialogue on just about anything that’s on your mind, and we’ll do the same.

So, myself trust you guys to engage in open and frank dialogue?  Is that really what you would say or write?  It can not be that difficult to figure out which word you should use in different contexts.  Maybe an enterprising writing instructor in the L.A. area can offer to give the folks at the Times a few refresher courses.


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