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- Comments: Resent-From: Karen Kay <LL23@NEMOMUS>
- From: Karen Kay <LL23%NEMOMUS.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu>
- Subject: Ask Mr. Language Person
- Comments: To: WORDS-L@UGA.CC.UGA.EDU
- Lines: 113
-
- This seems so suitable for this bunch!
-
- Karen
- --------------------------- Original Message ---------------------------
- Posted on 11 Dec 1992 at 21:08:01 by Dave Barry
-
- `ASK MR. LANGUAGE PERSON' RETURNS
-
- From: clarinews@clarinet.com (Dave Barry)
- Newsgroups: clari.feature.dave_barry
- Message-ID: <FbarryURb5b_2DD@clarinet.com>
- Date: Sat, 12 Dec 92 18:08:01 PST
-
- DAVE BARRY
-
- It's time once again for ``Ask Mister Language Person,'' the only
- language column that is endorsed by both the American Association of
- English Professors AND Cher. This column presents answers to common
- reader questions about grammar, vocabulary, punctuation, and, when they
- are in season, metaphors. These questions are not ``made up.'' They are
- authentic re-enactments of actual questions taken from police files.
- Q. What is the correct grammatical usage of ``being as how''?
- A. This is an adenoidal phrase that is used when a person needs to
- explain a decision regarding an issue such as sandwich allocation.
- EXAMPLE: ``Earl gets the egg salad, being as how he dropped it in the
- bait.''
- ------
- Q. Please tell me which is correct: ``Bud, you should never of fed
- them taffies to the dog,'' or ``Bud, you never should of fed them
- taffies to the dog.''
- A. According to Strunk & White, it depends on the context.
- Q. The context was a brand-new Barcalounger.
- A. Whoa.
- ------
- Q. I am thinking of seeking a high-paying job and would like to
- develop a Power Vocabulary. What do you suggest?
- A. The Academy of Big Words recommends that, in business situations,
- you should, whenever possible, use the words ``erstwhile'' and
- ``penultimate,'' as follows:
- YOU: Mr. Johnson, that there is a ERSTWHILE tie you got on.
- MR. JOHNSON: You're hired.
- YOU: Another big word I know is PENULTIMATE.
- ------
- Q. What is the actual name of a weatherperson on CNN?
- A. ``Flip Spiceland.''
- ------
- Q. Please repeat what you heard a woman say recently to the cashier
- at a gas station.
- A. She said: ``Do you have any of those cheap genetic cigarettes?''
- ------
- Q. Speaking of true quotations, please repeat the statement that
- Sonda Ward of Nashville, Tenn., swears she heard made by a man
- expressing concern to a woman who had been unable to get a ride to a
- church function.
- A. He said: ``Estelle, if I'd a knowed you'd a want to went, I'd a
- seed you'd a got to get to go.''
- Q. What tense is that, grammatically?
- A. That is your pluperfect consumptive.
- ------
- Q. I notice that football announcers are always talking about how So-
- and-So is ``the most underrated left tackle in football,'' and So-and-So
- is ``the most underrated substitute left outside nickel-defense
- cornerbacker in the Central Division.'' My question is, who underrates
- these people?
- A. This is done by computers.
- Q. Yes, but what kind of name is ``So-and-So''?
- A. Genetic.
- ------
- Q. According to alert reader Mary Ann van Hartesveldt, what was the
- exact wording on a sign she saw outside the Ridgecrest Baptist Church in
- Opelika, Ala.?
- A. It was:
- ARE YOU READY TO MEET JESUS? Bar-B-Q Saturday, March 16 2:00 p.m.
- ------
- Q. My question concerns the musical group Archie Bell and the Drells,
- who performed the 1968 hit ``Do the Tighten Up.'' When group members get
- asked what they do for a living, do they answer, ``I'm a Drell''? Do
- their business cards say:
- JOHN SMITH
- Drell
- Do they have career aspirations? Do they say, ``Well, sure, TODAY I'm
- a Drell, but if I do well on my exams, I hope to become a Pip, or even a
- Famous Flame''? Also, if you're introducing somebody to one of the Four
- Seasons, do you just say, ``This is Leonard; he's a Season''? Also,
- whatever happened to The Swinging Medallions, who sang the 1966 hit,
- ``Double Shot of My Baby's Love''?
- A. They are available. Give them a call.
- ------
- Q. What is the purpose of the semicolon?
- A. It can be used to either (1) separate two independent clauses, or
- (2) indicate an insect attack.
- EXAMPLES:
- (1) ``Well, I'm a clause that certainly doesn't need any help!'';
- ``Me either!''
- (2) ``Be careful not to bump into that ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
- AIEEEEEEE!''
- ------
- Q. Please explain correct usage of the expression ``by and large.''
- A. It is used as follows:
- -- ``Earline, I swear on my mother's grave that I never, ever cheated
- on you, by and large.''
- -- ``Read my lips, by and large.''
- ------
- TIP FOR PROFESSIONAL WRITERS: In writing a novel, be sure to include
- Character Development.
- WRONG: ``Brad gazed into Marsha's eyes.''
- RIGHT: ``Brad gazed into Marsha's eyes and noticed that she now had
- three of them.''
- GOT A QUESTION FOR MISTER LANGUAGE PERSON? It is best not to tell
- anyone.
-
- (C) 1992 THE MIAMI HERALD
- DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
-