A Word, Please: Does your writing transgress this editorâs pet peeves?
Most people have language peeves. Editorsâ peeves are different. After years spent laser-focused on writersâ mistakes, we can become hypersensitive to grammar mistakes, word choice errors and reader-unfriendly language that most English speakers may not notice at all.
So if youâre up for it, here are some of the peeves on this editorâs mind lately.
âAmong othersâ with no antecedent for âothers.â Consider the sentence: âThis includes meals, room charges, upgrades and resort fees, among others.â Among other whats? âOther,â in this case is acting as a pronoun. A pronoun refers to a noun that came before it â its antecedent: Joe knew he was in trouble. The pronoun âheâ is shorthand for the noun âJoe.â If our example sentence had kicked off with âThis includes costs like meals, room charges âŚâ then the noun âcostsâ would be the antecedent for the pronoun âothers.â But in our original sentence, âothersâ doesnât have an antecedent.
Insider language. The credit card terminals at my local grocery store indicate the user should enter âalt id.â Itâs not hard to guess this means alternate identification, but what does that mean? In this case, the terminal is asking for your phone number, which is an alternative way for the computer to identify you when you donât present your club card. But no one presents their club card. They just punch in their phone number. Shoppers probably donât think of their phone number as âalternateâ the way the system does. Only a programmer myopically focused on his role in the process would think of this as an âalt id.â Putting oneself in the customerâs shoes, itâs clear something like âph #â would be more meaningful. Similarly, I use a telephone banking system that instructs, âFor verification, press 1.â What they mean is âTo hear your balance, press 1.â Put yourself in the userâs shoes.
Most English users donât know the definition of âofâ and might not still after looking it up in the dictionary.
âThose thatâ as a subject. Those that find themselves at this restaurant. Those who travel frequently. Those that enjoy classic movies. These are all grammatically OK. But theyâre so abstract â only slightly more specific than calling these people âbeingsâ or âentities.â As a rule: the more specific and tangible your subjects, the more your reader connects with them. Go with âdiners,â âfrequent travelersâ and âclassic movie buffs.â
Initials in parentheses. Chances are no one but an editor would notice this: Writers are obsessed â obsessed â with telling readers that organizations have initials. The Assn. of Practicing and Retired Nursing Instructors (APRNI). The Jane and John Doe Center for Geriatric Research (JJDCGR).
Now, I know what youâre thinking: Those writers are just telling readers how they will refer to the organization from that point forward â like a legend or key or translation reference explaining how to read the rest of the story. To which I reply: Thatâs just rude. Telling readers they must digest a spoonful of alphabet soup in order to understand your terminology is authorial dereliction of duty.
But donât take it from me. âDo not follow an organizationâs full name with an abbreviation or acronym in parentheses or set it off by dashes,â the Associated Press Stylebook says. âIf an abbreviation or acronym would not be clear on second reference without this arrangement, do not use it.â
Between 16â20 years old. I have a personal distaste for dashes used to mean âtoâ or âthrough,â as in âfrom 16â20 years old.â Theyâre fine in tables, advertisements and graphic elements. But in running text, writers should use words and marks that stand in for words. But the word âbetweenâ takes this to a whole new level. The only logical complement to âbetweenâ with a number range is âand.â âBetween 16 and 20.â A dash can mean âthroughâ or âto.â But it never means âand.â
â June Casagrande is the author of âThe Joy of Syntax: A Simple Guide to All the Grammar You Know You Should Know. She can be reached at [email protected].
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