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"An entertaining and informative guide to the most common 150 words even smart people use incorrectly, along with pithy forays into their fascinating etymologies and tangled histories of use and misuse"--
FORMATHardcover LANGUAGEEnglish CONDITIONBrand New Publisher Description
An entertaining and informative guide to the most common 150 words even smart people use incorrectly, along with pithy forays into their fascinating etymologies and tangled histories of use and misuse.An entertaining and informative guide to the most common 150 words even smart people use incorrectly, along with pithy forays into their fascinating etymologies and tangled histories of use and misuse.Even the most erudite among us use words like apocryphal, facetious, ironic, meteorite, moot, redundant, and unique incorrectly every day. Don't be one of them. Using examples of misuse from leading newspapers, prominent public figures and famous writers, among others, language gurus Ross Petras and Kathryn Petras explain how to avoid these perilous pitfalls in the English language. Each entry also includes short histories of how and why these mistake have happened, some of the (often surprisingly nasty) debates about which uses are (and are not) mistakes, and finally, how to use these words correctly ... or why to not use them at all. By the end of this book, every literati will be able to confidently, casually, and correctly toss in an "a priori" or a "limns" without hesitation.
Author Biography
Kathryn Petras & Ross Petras, a sister-and-brother writing team, are the authors of many non-fiction books including the New York Times bestseller You're Saying It Wrong, and compilers of the bestselling page-a-day calendar The 365 Stupidest Things Ever Said (with over 4.8 million copies sold) and its counterpart The 365 Smartest Things Ever Said. Their work has received the attention of, or has been featured in, diverse media outlets including the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, the Wall Street Journal, Cosmopolitan, the Washington Post, the Huffington Post, Bustle, The Atlantic, the London Times, and McSweeney's. They have also been guests on hundreds of radio and tv shows, including Good Morning America, CNN, Fox & Friends, and NPR's Here and Now. They are currently working on a podcast for NPR affiliate KMUW entitled You're Saying It Wrong.
Review
Praise for You're Saying It Wrong:"[Contains] instructions ostensibly designed to make pronunciation a forte. (It's pronounced "fort," by the way.) And designed, too, to spare you the particular strain of embarrassment that results when you learn that you have been pretentiously mispronouncing the name of your already-pretentious sparkling water. You're Saying It Wrong acknowledges that most modern of problems: the fact that so many of us learn words not by hearing them, but by reading them." --the Atlantic"The best way to consume this book is in a room full of people who are from different parts of the country and have good senses of humor. Ask them how they pronounce each word that doesn't seem obvious. Let the frustration and laughter and discussion ensue."--The Awl
Promotional
An entertaining and informative guide to the most common 150 words even smart people use incorrectly, along with pithy forays into their fascinating etymologies and tangled histories of use and misuse.
Review Quote
Praise for You're Saying It Wrong : "[Contains] instructions ostensibly designed to make pronunciation a forte. (It's pronounced "fort," by the way.) And designed, too, to spare you the particular strain of embarrassment that results when you learn that you have been pretentiously mispronouncing the name of your already-pretentious sparkling water. You're Saying It Wrong acknowledges that most modern of problems: the fact that so many of us learn words not by hearing them, but by reading them." --the Atlantic "The best way to consume this book is in a room full of people who are from different parts of the country and have good senses of humor. Ask them how they pronounce each word that doesn't seem obvious. Let the frustration and laughter and discussion ensue." --The Awl
Promotional "Headline"
An entertaining and informative guide to the most common 150 words even smart people use incorrectly, along with pithy forays into their fascinating etymologies and tangled histories of use and misuse.
Excerpt from Book
INTRODUCTION Words bounce. Words, if you let them, will do what they want to do and what they have to do. --ANNE CARSON, AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF RED This book is about words that aren't doing what they want to do because we're not letting them. It's really a word liberation book--letting those words be the words they were meant to be. It's about how we misuse the English language and use the wrong words that don't mean what we think they mean. It's not only about mistakes, but about correcting those mistakes, and discussing if they're even mistakes at all. In short, it's about the 150 most commonly confused, abused, questioned, and misused words and phrases in the English language, according to surveys, dictionaries like Merriam-Webster's , usage panels like the American Heritage panel, and top word experts like Steven Pinker and Bryan Garner. Each entry includes examples of word misuse from the media along with short histories of how and why these mistakes have happened, as well as some of the (often surprisingly nasty) debates about which uses are mistakes, which aren't, and, finally, how to use these words correctly. These are the words that educated people most often misuse, are embarrassed about misusing, and want to use correctly. Some of them are what are sometimes called bubble words -- words of which you are sure you know the meaning, but you actually don't. Others are homophones --members of the always confusing sound-alike- but- mean- different group. Still others are paronyms , or what some people more colloquially call "confusables" because, yes, they're confusing on account of they sound similar (like mitigate and militate or discomfit and discomfort ) but yet again mean different things. These are all different forms of catachresis --the technical term for saying something that doesn't mean what you think it means. ***
Details ISBN0399581278 Author Ross Petras Pages 208 Year 2018 ISBN-10 0399581278 ISBN-13 9780399581274 Format Hardcover Imprint Ten Speed Press Country of Publication United States DEWEY 428.1 Publisher Ten Speed Press Place of Publication Berkeley CA Subtitle The 150 Most Commonly Misused Words and Their Tangled Histories Media Book Short Title That Doesn't Mean What You Think It Means Language English UK Release Date 2018-09-04 Publication Date 2018-09-04 AU Release Date 2018-09-04 NZ Release Date 2018-09-04 US Release Date 2018-09-04 Audience General We've got this
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