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April 2007, Vol. 9, No. 4       DD  Thursday, May 24, 2012


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The Vocabula Review welcomes letters to the editor. Please include your name, email address, and professional affiliation. Send your letters to editor@vocabula.com. We reserve the right to edit letters for length and clarity.

Nolde: Mask Still Life III

A Few Rules of English-Language Use — Part 2


• Some observations:

Rule 7 — Subjunctive:

English speakers have a very vague understanding of the subjunctive mood. At the moment I am attending a class in Italian (my French is fluent) and am learning how the Italian use of subjunctive differs from the French use. In French, the subjunctive is generally — although not always — determined by what goes before it. Certain verbs and expressions take the subjunctive and there is no choice. Italian, the subjunctive mood is called for in more situations than in French, but is often optional and can be used to distinguish nuances of meaning. On the other hand, it is possible for Italians to completely ignore the subjuctive either out of ignorance or deliberate disdain. Berlusconi never uses the subjunctive at all.

Most of my English-only classmates are totally baffled by the subjunctive, not understanding that "if I go" is indicative, while "if I went" is the subjunctive mood rather than past tense ("Isn't 'went' past?"). I think the problem for them is that the subjunctive in English does not have its own set of forms. It relies on forms we also use to distinguish tense or person like the "be" in "If this be treason..." or the missing s in "I prefer that he remain seated." Also, it is not always a mechanical either/or choice: both indicative and subjunctive constructions may be legitimate: If I am wrong, I will be the first to admit it.

Rule 9 — Stop using clichés

I think this advice can be overdone. It is hard to draw the line between cliches and figures of speech. "Step up to the plate" sounds pretty trite and I would never say that myself. On the other hand "uphill battle" or "losing battle" strikes me as no more than a common expression.

Rule 17 — Amongst, amidst, etc.

I agree that the -st forms of these words are disappearing from American usage but they are used commonly in the UK. When I read "whilst", this is tipoff that it was written by somebody from the UK. As a native American speaker, I don't use any of these forms very naturally myself, but I don't think they are completely arcahic yet even in American usage.

Additional rule: The pleonastic is.

Have you written about this one before? I notice my kids saying things like "The thing of it is, is that...." and "What it really is, is that... "

Jack Aubert
jaubert@cpcug.org

RHF replies: I have included a rule about the pleonastic, or "back-to-back," is in Part 3, this month's article.

Horseback Riding?


• We feel bound to mention that one does not add the adjective "horseback" when mentioning the activity of riding (Zombie Metaphors).

If there be any form of riding one can undertake which does not require a horse, then that is the occasion for specifying the nature of the ride, or the sort of mount, or both.

This might, properly, be more of a matter of general culture, rather than of specific language, but the protection and preservation of English is desirable more because of its cultural origins than for the mere convenience of the virtues of the language itself.

As with "the Sabbath being made for man", so with English and its significance and function as an ingredient of its culture.

Talk of "horseback" in conjunction with riding is as uncouth as putting down your knife at the dinner table in order to transfer the fork into your right hand to eat the fish, poultry, or roast.

"Hollyork" has not yet made savages of us all.

Harrow English School
harroweng@hotmail.com

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