A Word, Please: Casting a little shade on common grammar grievances
One reader wanted to vent about âon accidentâ vs. âby accident.â Another had a bone to pick with Wall Street Journal editors who donât keep straight âthatâ and âwhich.â Another complained about people who add the word ârightâ after every sentence, while yet another felt that inserting the word âlikeâ was the real problem.
These commenters were among the 1,100 or so readers who replied online to an article that wasnât about âthatâ and âwhich,â âon accidentâ or linguistic tics like ârightâ â and that didnât even appear in the Wall Street Journal.
Thatâs what happens when you talk about grammar in a public forum: Language grievances will demand their moment in the sun. So letâs address some of the comments on Michael Dirdaâs April 25, 2024, review of the Anne Curzan grammar book âSays Who?â
âMakes me crazy that the Wall Street Journal in particular constantly confuses âthatâ and âwhich,â âthatâ and âwho,â and âwhoâ and âwhom,ââ a reader called Local NYer posted. âClearly nothing is subject to copy-editing anymore.â
âThatâ and âwhichâ arenât as rigid as NYer seems to think. Some major editing styles have long said that âthatâ is for restrictive clauses and âwhichâ for nonrestrictive. A restrictive clause narrows down the range of nouns it refers to. Compare: âThe cookies that get gobbled up fast contain chocolate chipsâ and âThe cookies, which get gobbled up fast, contain chocolate chips.â See how in the first sentence weâre talking only about the cookies that get eaten first? Thatâs because the âthatâ clause narrows the range of cookies weâre talking about. But in the second example, âwhich get gobbled up fastâ isnât there to specify which cookies weâre talking about. Instead, âthe cookiesâ â all of them â get gobbled up fast and also contain chocolate chips. But unlike in publishing, in the real world, thereâs no rule that says you can never use âwhichâ in place of âthat,â especially because the commas usually make clear enough whether a clause is restrictive. So instead of a firm rule, this is just a good reminder to write clearly.
Many languages indicate ownership of something by using the word âof.â But English often uses an apostrophe and S, sometimes unnecessarily.
âThatâ and âwhoâ pose a similar issue. Editors usually feel that âwhoâ is better to refer to people than âthatâ because itâs specific to people: âthe man who I sawâ vs. âthe man that I saw.â I agree. But itâs OK to use âthatâ if you want.
As for using âwhoâ in place of âwhom,â that can be a tough call. Sometimes âwhomâ sounds so stuffy and formal that it distracts from your message. Precision language is nice, so I use âwhomâ when it suits, but getting your message across is whatâs most important.
As for âon accident,â this is a case in which no rule of syntax applies. âThe proper preposition is a matter of idiom,â wrote Theodore Bernstein in his 1965 guide âThe Careful Writer.â When choosing between prepositions like âonâ and âby,â go with the one that comes naturally or check a dictionary. If those methods fail, Bernstein wrote, âthe only thing to do is to consult three knowing friends and get a consensus.â So no one can say âon accidentâ is ungrammatical, but you can count me among your friends who say âby accidentâ is better.
A reader going by Speedostat added this comment: âThis latest fad drives me nuts: using the word âright?â after every statement someone utters. Geez, donât get me started, right?â
Interjections like âright?â are a matter of taste, but a user called dkb50 found another reason to take a swipe at Speedostat: âLatest? That was annoying me as a kid in the â60s.â
Thatâs how it goes when you write about grammar in a public space: Even nitpicks get nitpicked.
June Casagrande is the author of âThe Joy of Syntax: A Simple Guide to All the Grammar You Know You Should Know.â She can be reached at [email protected].
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