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Month: January 2026

Let’s get political — NOT!

Don’t let that knee jerk! I want to get an early start on demonstrating the lack of political side taking that I will demonstrate and also hope you will be able to emulate, when that would help you, which is often, in our present times of unprecedented (at least in the past century) divisiveness. For…

Read More “Let’s get political — NOT!” »

authenticity

Ending Pronoun Madness – 2 — incl. HOW (to *do* it, graciously!)

In this post — a continuation of  Part 1 — I am heading, with a critical eye but also a fix-it mentality, straight into a trend (grammatical? sociological?) of growing dominance in publishing and other mainstream settings. Motivationally speaking . . . I would like to clarify my motivation for “targeting” this this topic (“pronoun…

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Controversy Corner

Ending Pronoun madness #1 — the WHY (b/c “Words Matter”?)

“Words Matter” — that’s my mantra for curing “pronoun madness.” Ironically, it’s the same (unexplained, unsupported, and unconvincing) mantra used/misused/abused by the shallow and misguided advocates of the very pronoun madness I wish to eradicate from our language, especially in public use. Note: Elsewhere in the Writing Lessons, section of this blog (under Grammar &…

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Controversy Corner

Stage 1-b: What “one thing” does every sentence need?

You say you want a “revelation” . . . Apologies to John Lennon, but you, Reader-student, are now about to emerge out of the “Helter Skelter” of your piecemeal knowledge of grammar. And, to get started on the transformation, you can, right now, dig in to the first “stage” of my three-stage program of learning…

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MZ-general

Stage 1-c: “Simple” vs. “complete” subjects & predicates

Subjects and predicates — “simple” or “complete”? While we’re defining technical grammatical terms, let me point out that subjects and predicates, both, come in two forms: simple and complete. That’s a pretty minor technicality, but understanding the difference will soon prove helpful. So let’s differentiate. The simple forms of both subject (S) and predicate (P)…

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MZ-general

Stage 1- d: Exceptions to the rule (that MCs are “essential”)

Q: Are there exceptions to this “foundational” rule? A: Yes. Before we move on to Stage 2, where we will explore the possibilities (and rules) regarding using more than one main clause in your sentences, let me point out right now that English grammar allows for several quite-common exceptions to our foundational (and I might even…

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Controversy Corner

Stage 1-e — on Predicates — up close

Get ready to take a closer — and fuller — look at the predicate. Crucially, it makes for “half” of the all-important (not to mention essential) grammatical building block of the sentence, the main clause. Yes, our sentences usually present the subject first, then the predicate, as shown and exemplified throughout my Stage 1-b post,…

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MZ-general

Stage 1-f — on Subjects — up *real* close

In this final post in Stage 1, we’ll wrap up our foundation, as I’ve been calling this stage, with a much-closer look at the subject, the predicate’s mate in the main clause (aka independent clause).  But, before we get into this “subjective” exploration (and that’s more than a pun, as you will soon see), let’s…

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MZ-general

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