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	<title>richarddnorth.com/archived-sites/hughcurtiss &#187; Language</title>
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	<description>[Note (28 August 2012) This site is a little spoof perpetrated for a while by Richard D North at richarddnorth.com/archived-sites/hughcurtiss. It is now archived as a matter of curiosity and record and even mea culpa.] I am Hugh Curtiss, a business, organisational and spiritual consultant. I love capitalists and politicians. After years behind the scenes, I am dabbling in wider debate. Do join me.</description>
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		<title>Watch my language</title>
		<link>http://richarddnorth.com/archived-sites/hughcurtiss/2008/07/watch-my-language/</link>
		<comments>http://richarddnorth.com/archived-sites/hughcurtiss/2008/07/watch-my-language/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Jul 2008 12:07:49 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I am on the look out for misuse of words and grammar. It was a pleasure to find Bill Bryson&#8217;s very good literary style books (they are his only interesting output, surely?). Years ago I used to think Kingsley Amis was tiresome with his anxieties that English as she is spoke and writ was going to the dogs. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am on the look out for misuse of words and grammar. It was a pleasure to find Bill Bryson&#8217;s very good <a title="Bryson's style dictionaries" href="http://www.amazon.com/Brysons-Dictionary-Writers-Editors-Bryson/dp/0767922697" target="_blank">literary style books </a>(they are his only interesting output, surely?).<span id="more-13"></span></p>
<p>Years ago I used to think Kingsley Amis was tiresome with his anxieties that English as she is spoke and writ was going to the dogs. What a lower middle-class anxiety that was, I thought. And all muddled-up with academic snobbery. Now, I want to avoid my own outbreak of middle-aged grumpiness by getting my irritations of my chest. I shall only remark on the bad habits of broadsheets. I don&#8217;t want to take cheap shots. Here&#8217;s a couple for starters. Oops. &#8220;Here <em>are</em> a couple&#8230;?&#8221;</p>
<p>(1)   &#8221;Fed up of&#8221;<br />
This is very awkward. There is no reason why one should not be &#8220;fed up of&#8221; things, any more than that one should be &#8220;tired of&#8221; them. But, sorry chaps, the habit of saying one is &#8220;fed up with&#8221; things is simply the habit of people who care about language.    </p>
<p>(2)<br />
&#8220;Had of&#8230;.&#8221;<br />
Lots of speakers who should know better use: &#8220;If he had of gone to Rome&#8221; instead of &#8220;If he had gone to Rome&#8221;. They are probably sloppily carrying on from the feeling that, &#8220;He would of gone to Rome&#8221; is as good as, &#8220;He would have gone to Rome&#8221;.</p>
<p>A reader challenges me that he doesn&#8217;t believe I could have seen this usage in a broadsheet. I agree that I haven&#8217;t seen the former, but I swear I&#8217;ve seen the latter. (Can&#8217;t remember where though. Damn it.)</p>
<p>(3)<br />
&#8220;He use to..&#8221;<br />
I saw this the other day, as in &#8220;He use to go to town&#8221;. Of course, this might be a sub&#8217;s typo (and missing &#8220;d&#8221;) rather than someone phonetically taking sloppy speech into sloppy writing. &#8220;He used to go to town&#8221; is an odd usage, for sure. I suppose it&#8217;s an elision or an elipsis or an eliding of &#8220;He was used to go town&#8230;&#8221;.</p>
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