This post was published in the Wilson Times Dec. 14, 2019
“The difference between the
almost-right word and the right word is really a large matter — ‘tis the
difference between the lightning bug and the lightning,” Mark Twain said.
I spent most of my working
life trying to find the right word or trying to explain to subordinates why the
words they used were not right. The distinction was never as clear as lightning
bug and lightning. Although I had earned a college degree in journalism and
English, I had much to learn about the subtle differences between words that
sound or are spelled alike. Several books devoted to correct word usage
expanded my education.
In the 1970s, I read two
books by television newsman Edwin Newman, “Strictly Speaking” and “A Civil
Tongue.” Newman’s clear and often amusing explanations of word usage made me a
crusader for proper usage. Both books are still available online. The
Associated Press Stylebook teaches AP writers and subscribing newspapers the
difference, for example, between a lectern and a podium. Often known as the
newspaper’s bible, the Stylebook is a resource I still turn to, a decade after
leaving the newsroom.
But there are other books
that will make you an unctuous corrector of verbal errors (and I do mean verbal, not oral — there’s a difference). Perhaps the best I can recommend is
“Words on Words,” the alphabetical listing of words that are often misused
compiled by John B. Bremner. This author conducted a class on correct word
usage that I attended more than 35 years ago. He sold me after the first five
minutes. The man — a former Catholic priest turned Journalism professor at the
University of Kansas — knew his stuff and presented it in a delightfully
entertaining way. The class I attended was part of a national tour sponsored by
the Knight (newspaper) Foundation. Bremner died in 1987 at age 67.
When subtle differences in
meanings arise between words, I turn to Bremner’s book, the AP Stylebook or
(for really difficult issues) H.W. Fowler’s 1944 “Modern English Usage.” Fowler
is written for the harshest of teachers with a very British perspective. Some
of his explanations of correct usage are so thorough you’ll wish you never
asked.
For someone who wants only a
practical guide with simple explanations, I would recommend the “AP Stylebook”
or “Words on Words.” Any teacher of any scholastic discipline should expect
correct usage in their students’ writing. Using the wrong word in a history or
sociology class should be penalized the same as it would be in an English
class.
What’s the big deal? Are
these the rantings of a handful of snobbish elites who like to say, “You mean
lie, not lay”? As I told reporters when I was an editor, “Would you hire a
carpenter who didn’t know how to use a hammer or saw? Your tools as a writer
are words and punctuation. You have to know how to use them. Fortunately, you
can look up most things.
Dictionaries, like
encyclopedias, have gone on-line in the digital age, and I use a dictionary app
on my computer for quick checks of word meaning or similar words (in thesaurus
mode). This feature has made my writing more efficient because it’s quicker to
use the dictionary app than to pull the dictionary off the shelf and thumb
through the pages to the questioned word. But for more thorough understanding
of correct usage, printed guidebooks, such as “Words on Words” are still
important. Unlike a dictionary, these usage books explain how a word differs
from similar words.
As with dictionaries or
encyclopedia, usage books can be so intriguing that a user can easily get lost
in the details. Aren’t words wonderful?
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