Canadian Style Tip #21: University degrees & professional designations

This post is part of the Canadian Style series. 1.08 University degrees, professional designations, military decorations, honours, awards and memberships Do not follow a person’s name with more than two abbreviations unless required for information or protocol purposes. Select the two highest honours of different types and list them in the following order of precedence:… Continue reading Canadian Style Tip #21: University degrees & professional designations

Top 10 grammar traps

Stop runaway sentences However needs a cap and a comma Get itsy bitsy its correct Put apostrophes in their place Trap the wandering only Me me me, not I myself Items on a list must be a matching set Each and every one is singular Get tricky subjects to agree with their verbs Make sure… Continue reading Top 10 grammar traps

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10 Most Annoying Grammar Mistakes

Third conditional Don’t vs doesn’t Bring vs take Fewer vs less Semicolon use with however Have vs of Double negative Present perfect Went vs gone Its vs it’s See the detailed list at Karen’s Linguistic Issues.

Canadian Style Tip #19: Points of the compass

This post is part of the Canadian Style series. 2.13 Points of the compass Write as one word compass directions consisting of two points, but use a hyphen after the first point in those compounds consisting of three points. northwest south-southeast

Difference between sitting and seating

This is part of the difference between series. I’ve heard some people confusing the words sitting and seating. Here’s the difference between the two. Seating Seating refers to how seats are laid out. The seating arrangement is fan-shaped. Sitting Sitting refers to how one sits. The sitting arrangement will be on the floor rather than… Continue reading Difference between sitting and seating

Difference between who’s and whose

Another pair of words that seems to confuse people is that of “who’s” and “whose”, but telling the difference between the two is easy. Who’s “Who’s” is a contraction, a word formed by omitting or combining some of the sounds of a longer phrase. Other examples include won’t, can’t, shouldn’t. In this case, who’s actually means “who is”.… Continue reading Difference between who’s and whose