Saturday, March 21, 2020
Hi Marisa, Essays - , Term Papers, Research Papers
Hi Marisa, How are you doing? I'm emailing you about my future in Campus Ambassadors. In the next year I will be graduating with my Bachelors degree. God has really showed me that Campus Ambassadors is where he wants me, so after that year I will be going fulltime. He has also put a couple of different options in my path. One is running the MCC Campus Ambassadors and second is planting a new ministry in Florida at a college that does not have any Christian clubs. During this year I want to raise beyond my Intern package so I will be able to get on campus without having to take time off. The reason I'm telling you this is because I don't have many contacts because I spent many years in foster care moving around and don't have any solid people from when I was younger. One way many missionaries like myself get those contacts is through
Thursday, March 5, 2020
5 Cases of Erroneous Usage
5 Cases of Erroneous Usage 5 Cases of Erroneous Usage 5 Cases of Erroneous Usage By Mark Nichol Writers who have misheard words and expressions or remember them imperfectly are prone to misrepresenting them in their prose. The following sentences include examples of such errors, followed by discussion and revision. 1. Trustees- jail inmates selected for jobs like food preparation and garbage collection- were sneaking drugs in on food trays. A trustee is a person or organization that manages money or property for someone else or a person who serves on a board. The appropriate term in this sentence is the plural of the noun trusty: â€Å"Trusties- jail inmates selected for jobs like food preparation and garbage collection- were sneaking drugs in on food trays.†2. Her tongue-and-cheek comment was inappropriate for the occasion. A writer unfamiliar with the idiomatic phrase denoting irony, insincerity, or whimsy has mistaken one of the words in the phrase for another: â€Å"Her tongue-in-cheek comment was inappropriate for the occasion.†3. The galley on this sailboat looks as if it could be a kitchen in a home in a housing track. Here, a writer has presumably misheard the term tract- referring in this context to a housing development, as track- and is unaware of the distinction: â€Å"The galley on this sailboat looks as if it could be a kitchen in a home in a housing tract.†4. In this type of story, the hero undergoes a right of passage. This sentence refers to a ritual, not something one is entitled to: â€Å"In this type of story, the hero undergoes a rite of passage.†5. Smith has a Masters of education and spent several decades as a schoolteacher. Masters is the plural form of master. Master’s is the possessive form, which is what is appropriate here. Also, though it is implicit that degree is what â€Å"belongs†to the master, it’s best to include the word and to use the pertinent preposition: â€Å"Smith has a master’s degree in education and spent several decades as a schoolteacher.†(Also, as shown in the revision, a word denoting a level of degree is not capitalized.) Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Usage Review category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:30 Religious Terms You Should KnowComma Before ButUsing "zeitgeist" Coherently
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)