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05-16-2007, 12:34 PM
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Join Date: May 2002
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RedefinedDiva
I wish some folks would stop throwing an apostrophe in front of every 's' that falls at the end of a word.
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Thank you. For example, GLO's is not the plural of GLO.
My pet grammatical peeve is the misuse of "myself" in place of "I" or "me," as in "Redefined Diva, Drolefille and myself will be conducting grammar reviews." And lately, my wife and I have observed a distressing increase the use of "I" in place of "me": "BlueReign appropriately corrected christiangirl and I."
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05-16-2007, 01:09 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MysticCat
: "BlueReign appropriately corrected christiangirl and I."

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I just thought, "Corrected us doing what?" But I get it now.
It's not exactly an error, but I can't stand leaving "I" in lower case on the net. I might if I'm typing in a hurry, but normally I can't do that. It just doesn't look right.
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05-16-2007, 01:13 PM
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I am taking a class via my employer about business grammar right now. We are using The Gregg Reference Manual . I am actually enjoying it.  And I write very well (not good).
re: the use of " 's" to pluralize words. (b/c that irks the HELL out of me)
Our book actually has examples when this is ok, usually for clarity's sake.
EX: (p. 182)
dotting the i's
four c.o.d's
sending out three bcc's
But NOT "the Zeta's, Sigma's and AKA's are all probating tomorrow".
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Last edited by nikki1920; 05-16-2007 at 04:00 PM.
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05-17-2007, 12:44 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: In the fraternal Twin Cities
Posts: 6,433
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nikki1920
I am taking a class via my employer about business grammar right now. We are using The Gregg Reference Manual . I am actually enjoying it.  And I write very well (not good).
re: the use of " 's" to pluralize words. (b/c that irks the HELL out of me)
Our book actually has examples when this is ok, usually for clarity's sake.
EX: (p. 182)
dotting the i's
four c.o.d's
sending out three bcc's
But NOT "the Zeta's, Sigma's and AKA's are all probating tomorrow".
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Gregg is a good manual for business writing.
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Born: Epsilon Xi / Zeta Chi, SIUC
Raised: Minneapolis/St. Paul Alumnae
Reaffirmed: Glen Ellyn Area Alumnae
All in the MIGHTY MIDWEST REGION!
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05-17-2007, 12:19 PM
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can someone give me the lowdown on using parentheses inside of parentheses? i feel like it shouldnt be done... but sometimes you have a lot to say that needs to be stated and its not necessarily worth a footnote.
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Do you know people? Have you interacted with them? Because this is pretty standard no-brainer stuff. -33girl
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05-17-2007, 09:23 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tld221
can someone give me the lowdown on using parentheses inside of parentheses? i feel like it shouldnt be done... but sometimes you have a lot to say that needs to be stated and its not necessarily worth a footnote.
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That's a good one.
Ladygreek, ensure/insure/assure can be used interchangeably? Amazing. I just took a class not too long ago and that's what I learned. Rules change so much. Thanks for the info.
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05-17-2007, 11:59 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: In the fraternal Twin Cities
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Quote:
Originally Posted by delph998
That's a good one.
Ladygreek, ensure/insure/assure can be used interchangeably? Amazing. I just took a class not too long ago and that's what I learned. Rules change so much. Thanks for the info.
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Not to say that what you learned isn't correct, but per the U of MN style book the distinction really doesn't matter anymore, because they all end up implying the same thing--making sure something happens.
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DSQ
Born: Epsilon Xi / Zeta Chi, SIUC
Raised: Minneapolis/St. Paul Alumnae
Reaffirmed: Glen Ellyn Area Alumnae
All in the MIGHTY MIDWEST REGION!
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05-17-2007, 09:40 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: At my new favorite writing spot.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tld221
can someone give me the lowdown on using parentheses inside of parentheses? i feel like it shouldnt be done... but sometimes you have a lot to say that needs to be stated and its not necessarily worth a footnote.
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You might use a dash instead, to set off information inside of the parentheses. You're right, too many sets of parentheses looks cluttered. Also, sometimes with that parenthetical information, which is often meant to clarify or further specify about non-parenthetical information, you might not need to say as much as you think (you might feel like you do, but it may be that what you are writing goes without saying), or it really might work better as a footnote. If it is really important, then you wouldn't want to put it in parentheses anyway.
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05-18-2007, 12:00 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: In the fraternal Twin Cities
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Little32
You might use a dash instead, to set off information inside of the parentheses. You're right, too many sets of parentheses looks cluttered. Also, sometimes with that parenthetical information, which is often meant to clarify or further specify about non-parenthetical information, you might not need to say as much as you think (you might feel like you do, but it may be that what you are writing goes without saying), or it really might work better as a footnote. If it is really important, then you wouldn't want to put it in parentheses anyway.
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Excellent response.
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DSQ
Born: Epsilon Xi / Zeta Chi, SIUC
Raised: Minneapolis/St. Paul Alumnae
Reaffirmed: Glen Ellyn Area Alumnae
All in the MIGHTY MIDWEST REGION!
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01-14-2008, 10:19 AM
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Posts: 22,590
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The apostrophe as it relates to NPHC Founders
All NPHC organizations have more than one founder. Correct?
Founder is singular.
Founder's is singular possessive
Ex: That founder's elephant collection is on display at National Headquarters.
Founders is plural. (more than one)
Founders' is plural possessive. (belonging to more than one)
Ex: The founders' degrees are on display at National Headquarters.
Founders Day, in the case of Delta Sigma Theta, does not need an apostrophe. At all. I cannot speak for the other 8 organizations on the apostrophe's presence, but I do know that it shouldn't ever be Founder's because there is more than one founder.
So next January I want to see more Happy Founders Day and zero Happy Founder's Day.
Por favor.
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