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#grammar

Read through the most famous quotes by topic #grammar




A synonym is a word you use when you can't spell the other one.


Baltasar Gracián


#grammar #speech #spelling #synonyms #vocabulary

a quite novel kind of grammar and logic, according to which what is something is nothing


Martin Luther


#grammar

A preposition is a terrible thing to end a sentence with.


Winston Churchill


#grammar

... [In 'Pride and Prejudice'] Mr Collins's repulsiveness in his letter [about Lydia's elopement] does not exist only at the level of the sentence: it permeates all aspects of his rhetoric. Austen's point is that the well-formed sentence belongs to a self-enclosed mind, incapable of sympathetic connections with others and eager to inflict as much pain as is compatible with a thin veneer of politeness. Whereas Blair judged the Addisonian sentence as a completely autonomous unit, Austen judges the sentence as the product of a pre-existing moral agent. What counts is the sentence's ability to reveal that agent, not to enshrine a free-standing morsel of truth. Mr Darcy's letter to Elizabeth, in contrast, features a quite different practice of the sentence, including an odd form of punctation ... The dashes in Mr Darcy's letter transform the typographical sentence by physically making each sentence continuous with the next one. ... The dashes insist that each sentence is not self-sufficient but belongs to a larger macrostructure. Most of Mr Darcy's justification consists not of organised arguments like those of Mr Collins but of narrative. ... The letter's totality exists not in the typographical sentence but in the described event.


Andrew Elfenbein


#jane-austen #linguistics #style #grammar

Each letter of the alphabet is a steadfast loyal soldier in a great army of words, sentences, paragraphs, and stories. One letter falls, and the entire language falters.


Vera Nazarian


#grammar #language #languages #letter #literacy

Like prepositional phrases, certain structural arrangements in English are much more important than the small bones of grammar in its most technical sense. It really wouldn't matter much if we started dropping the s from our plurals. Lots of words get along without it anyway, and in most cases context would be enough to indicate number. Even the distinction between singular and plural verb forms is just as much a polite convention as an essential element of meaning. But the structures, things like passives and prepositional phrases, constitute, among other things, an implicit system of moral philosophy, a view of the world and its presumed meanings, and their misuse therefore often betrays an attitude or value that the user might like to disavow.


Richard Mitchell


#language #thinking #thought #attitude

Arguments over grammar and style are often as fierce as those over IBM versus Mac, and as fruitless as Coke versus Pepsi and boxers versus briefs.


Jack Lynch


#coke #fierce #fruitless #grammar #ibm

Never use abstract nouns when concrete ones will do. If you mean “More people died” don’t say “Mortality rose.


C.S. Lewis


#grammar #mortality #nouns #writing #death

Grammar is a piano I play by ear.


Joan Didion


#play

People who practice freedom of expression are terrorizing our grammatical way of life.


Bauvard


#freedom #funny #grammar #humor #terrorism






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