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As the author of the Word Court columns that appear in The Atlantic
Monthly, Barbara Wallraff is one of America's most widely read and
beloved writers on language. Now, in Your Own Words, Wallraff
guides the reader through a variety of intriguing questions about
English--and simultaneously explains how you, too, can be a
language expert. On one level, Your Own Words is about
dictionaries, stylebooks, usage manuals, visual dictionaries,
thesauri, writing guides, and the Internet: the strengths and
weaknesses of these and other language-references sources, where
the sources disagree, and the ways in which even educated people
misunderstand them. On a deeper level, however, Your Own Words is
about how to make good form your own--to reach your own conclusions
and develop a style that expresses you at your best. Illuminated
throughout with anecdotes and selections from the Word Court
columns, Your Own Words accomplishes what very few books on usage
even attempt: It shows everyone with an interest in words--amateur,
professional, student, or graduate--how to think about what goes
into good style.
By the author of the Atlantic Monthly's highly popular column "Word
Court," the most engaging grammar guide of our time, with all the
authority of "Strunk" "and White" and all the fun of "Woe Is I."
The "Judge Judy of Grammar" was born when the Atlantic Monthly's
Barbara Wallraff began answering grammar questions on America
Online. This vibrant exchange became the magazine's bimonthly "Word
Court," and eventually the bestselling hardcover book, Word Court.
In Word Court, Wallraff moves beyond her column to tackle common
and uncommon items, establishing rules for such issues as turns of
phrase, slang, name usage, punctuation, and newly coined
vocabulary. With true wit, she deliberates and decides on the right
path for lovers of language, ranging from classic questions-Is "a
historical" or "an historical" correct?-to awkward issues-How long
does someone have to be dead before we should all stop calling her
"the late"? Should you use "like" or "as"-and when?
The result is a warmly humorous, reassuring, and brilliantly
perceptive tour of how and why we speak the way we do.
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