Preposition Codify: 1. You Can't End A Sentence With A Preposition
Preposition Codify: 1. You Can't End A Sentence With A Preposition
Preposition Codify: 1. You Can't End A Sentence With A Preposition
Those who believe that split infinitives are grammatically incorrect would
rewrite these sentences as:
She used secretly to admire him.
You really have to watch him.
Avoiding splitting infinitives can change the emphasis of whats being said.
These sentences dont have quite the same meaning:
You really have to watch him. [i.e. Its important that you watch him] You
have to really watch him. [i.e. You have to watch him very closely]
Read more about splitting those infinitives.
5. You cant start a sentence with hopefully
You absolutely can. This use of hopefully to mean it is hoped rather than the
adverbial in a hopeful manner has been disputed in the past several years,
though it has found its way into general acceptance. So despite the fact that all
sentence adverbs were once frowned on, nowadays you should be able to use
happily, along with most other sentence adverbs (such as sadly, strangely, or
obviously).
So why are thankfully and hopefully singled out for particular opprobrium?
The answer lies in the fact that hopefully and thankfully cant be reworded
along the lines of other sentence adverbs, using the constructions it is hopeful
that or it is thankful that:
Hopefully, planning delays will be minimal.
X It is hopeful that planning delays will be minimal.
Instead, you have to reword such sentences along the lines of:
It is to be hoped that planning delays will be minimal.
6. The passive voice should not be used
Even though your teacher possibly warned you against it, the passive voice is
perfectly acceptable. The passive tends to be used in formal documents such
as official reports or scientific papers, often where an action or situation is
regarded as more significant than who or what did or caused it:
active:
passive:
For example, in the above active example, the victor and loser of the match
are made perfectly clear by the active structure: Spain, the subject of the
sentence, beat Brazil, the object of the sentence, in a match. In the passive
example, the information about Spain is missing, thus the agent of Brazils
loss remains unclear what is most important is the outcome of the game, not
the winner.
However, even though the use of the passive voice is perfectly permissible,
most people favor the active voice because of how it provides a fuller account.
7. You cannot use whose to refer to things
Yes, you can use whose to refer to things, not only people or groups of people.
Sometimes, sticklers will insist that rearranging the sentence using of which.
The below is an example sentence on OxfordDictionaries.com using whose:
Gasping for breath, they reached the row of houses whose gardens led onto
the park.
This is the same sentence rewritten to accommodate of which:
Gasping for breath, they reached the row of houses, the gardens of which led
onto the park.
The rewritten version using of which is clearly awkward and unwieldy. The
better option here is to simply use whose instead.
Myth #5: You use "a" before words that start with
consonants, and "an" before words that start with vowels.
Actually, you use "a" before words that start with consonant sounds, and "an" before words
that start with vowel sounds. For example, it's correct to write "I have an RSS feed" but
incorrect to write "I have a RSS feed." When in doubt, sound the sentence out in your head.