For Authors: May 21, 2008 Issue [#2407] |
For Authors
This week: Edited by: Fyn More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
It takes two to speak truth --One to speak, and another to hear.
- Henry David Thoreau
The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never simple.
- Oscar Wilde
They deem him their worst enemy who tells them the truth. - Plato
Time discovers truth. - Seneca
Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities. Truth isn't.
- Mark Twain
There are only two people who can tell you the truth about
yourself - an enemy who has lost his temper and a friend
who loves you dearly.
- Antisthenes
I never did give anybody hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell. - Harry S Truman
A lie told often enough becomes the truth. - Lenin
A lie can travel half-way around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes. - Mark Twain
Language has three important uses--it expresses thought, conceals thought, and takes the place of thought. --Unknown
After all is said and done, more is said than done. --Unknown
Among my most prized possessions are words that I have never spoken. --Orson Rega Card
Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret. --Ambrose Bierce
If you think little of a person, you ought to say as little as you think. -Benjamin Franklin
Great minds talk about ideas, Average minds talk about things, Small minds talk about other people. --Unknown
Truth and vision vary from one beholder to the next. I am Fyndorian and I'm pleased to bring you this week's 'For Authors' Newsletter.
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More learning from the convenience store school of thought.
The following people were in my store the other day.
1. A young man, 18-ish dressed in jeans with one leg red, the other white. He has a Mohawk, numerous earrings as well as a tongue ring and several in his nose and eyebrows. He has at least three visible tattoos.
2. Clean cut high school senior, short hair, expensive clothes, drives a 2007 Grand Am.
3. Forties-ish business woman, classy clothes, always looks as if she just came from the hairdresser....pleasant.
4. Older gentleman, perhaps in his 60's. Three days worth of stubble, needs a haircut, his clothes are tattered and dirty.
5. Cranky guy in his fifties. Hands creased and calloused, his painter's pants reflecting a day of painting blue and yellow rooms.
6. She's perhaps 25, very high heels, very short skirt, very long hair, very brief top. Chawing on gum and talking a mile a minute on her cell phone.
7. Elderly lady, white haired, Youth-dew perfume, soft speaking, polite.
Now these same folks individually did the following. Can you guess who did what?
a. Pumped 53.47 dollars worth of gas, laid the nozzle down on the ground and took off?
b. Speaks well and politely, never swears. Cleans up Icee machine messes and those of others.
c. Always has a nice word for everyone, cheerful, never complains.
d. Chased down the person who tried to leave without paying for the gas.
e. Turned in the attempting shoplifter.
f. Tries to steal hot dogs and candy on a regular basis. Comes in reeking of pot.
g. Collapsed in the parking lot of a drug overdose.
You might be surprised at the answers. Seems that truth has many faces and depends upon the eyes seeing a truth, colored by experience, prejudice, stereotypes and age.
When devising characters don't be afraid to make unusual choices and stay away from the expected, or stereotypical ones. People have a tendency to surprise us should we takes the time to both look and see them. Should the characters we create be any different?
Oh and nothing to do with the match-ups, but of those same folks mentioned above...one won a HUGE lottery last year. Another plays the violin so well it can make you weep. And another just got a full scholarship to Yale. Care to guess?
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And this one sent as a reply to my last newsletter!!!
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Answers....
1-b
2-f
3-g
4-c
5-e
6-d
7-a
and 1 got the scholarship, 5 won the money and 4 plays the sweetest violin! Go figure!!!
THANKFUL SONALI Library Class! wrote:
Thank you for this! I've come across some of these, too, while reviewing, and I'm glad you've consolidated them and explained them so clearly.
~~~~~I'm glad it was helpful!
Voxxylady adds:
Fyn, great rundown on misused words!
Alright instead of all right is disputed and while I agree that all right is always correct in formal writing, I do purposely use alright in dialogue where I'm showing informal colloquial speech. Using little things like this once you know the rules can make a difference. I'm also doing a series from the 70s and I write travelling instead of traveling because at that time, travelling was the proper way to spell it! I remember that vividly from grade school English class and the debate beginning about the extra L becoming unnecessary, according to experts.
~~~~~Thanks. Always interesting to see how words change over time!
kiyasama says:
Double plug! Thanks so much! Smile
The poem at the beginning of this was quite funny, but you do bring up a lot of good points about the spelling error (and it is difficult considering that the spellchecker doesn't always catch it.) Very informative newsletter. Thanks!
~~~~~You are quite welcome! I suppose if 'spell checkers' caught all the mistakes, there'd been no need for proofreaders....
Zeke wrote:
I printed this letter out because in included some very helpful information. Just one thing, around can also be used as a direction, ie I went around the world.
~~~~~good point!!!
J. A. Buxton said:
When Googling some time back, I found a wonderful online site about misused words. I highly recommend anyone who has problems in this area check the site out.
http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/errors/errors.html#errors
~~~~~always helpful! And from that site I offer the following for all who wrote asking about lie/lay!
You lay down the book you've been reading, but you lie down when you go to bed. In the present tense, if the subject is acting on some other object, it's "lay." If the subject is lying down, then it's "lie." This distinction is often not made in informal speech, partly because in the past tense the words sound much more alike: "He lay down for a nap," but "He laid down the law." If the subject is already at rest, you might "let it lie." If a helping verb is involved, you need the past participle forms. "Lie" becomes "lain" and "lay" becomes "laid": "He had just lain down for a nap," and "His daughter had laid the gerbil on his nose."
Hope you all have a good week and a safe and memorable holiday weekend (for those of you here in the US of A. |
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