Mind the Gaffe! Quotes

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Mind the Gaffe!: A Troubleshooter's Guide to English Style and Usage – The Cheeky Language Reference for Writers and Grammar Enthusiasts Mind the Gaffe!: A Troubleshooter's Guide to English Style and Usage – The Cheeky Language Reference for Writers and Grammar Enthusiasts by R.L. Trask
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Mind the Gaffe! Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4
“It is possible to use that with people, but the result is often rather clumsy. While the linguists that are working on this problem is not quite wrong, it doesn’t sound as good as the linguists who are working on this problem. Prefer who with people.”
R.L. Trask, Mind the Gaffe: The Penguin Guide to Common Errors in English
“Note in particular that a noun denoting a group of people takes which, not who. You cannot write *the battalion who had captured the fortress because a battalion, though composed of people, is not itself a person: write the battalion which had captured the fortress.”
R.L. Trask, Mind the Gaffe: The Penguin Guide to Common Errors in English
“it is impossible to use that if the relative clause is non-restrictive – that is, if it does not serve to identify the thing under discussion, but only serves to provide more information about that thing. So, you must write the Suez Canal, which was opened in 1869, and you cannot write *the Suez Canal, that was opened in 1869.”
R.L. Trask, Mind the Gaffe: The Penguin Guide to Common Errors in English
“dissociate, disassociate Both are possible, but dissociate is more usual, and is recommended.”
R.L. Trask, Mind the Gaffe: The Penguin Guide to Common Errors in English