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be graphic ways of presenting the thought, but good writers never use them and good speakers should avoid them.
The First, Single
“I have not found the first objection to his candidacy.” Say “a single objection,” or “no objection.”
First two
Such has been the strong desire to continue to use forms of expression that we have long used that not a little time and effort have been expended in the endeavor to make the wrong appear right. It is an accepted fact, however, that a large majority of the best speakers and writers now say the first two, the last five, etc., rather than the two first, the five last.
Future, Subsequent
The word future is sometimes used instead of subsequent; as, “Until he was eighteen years old his conduct was marked by cruelty and malice, but his future life was characterized by kindness and generosity.” Future looks forward from the present, and not from some point of time in the past.
Gent’s pants
“Gent’s pants scoured and pressed.”
Business signs and business advertisements are responsible
for many vulgarisms. Never say gent’s nor
pants. Even pantaloons is not so good a word as
trousers.
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Sit, Set
Few words afford a more fertile field for grammatical blundering than the verbs sit and set. The important fact to remember in the use of the words is that sit, in modern usage, is an intransitive verb, and does not take an object, while set, which means to place in position, is transitive, and requires an object to complete its meaning. You cannot sit a thing, but you do set or place a thing.
The verb sit undergoes a slight change with the change of tense or time. “I sit at the window today.” “I sat at the window yesterday.” “I have sat at the window daily for many years.” “Sitting at the window, I saw the storm arise.” “Having sat at his table, I can testify to his hospitality.”
The transitive verb set undergoes no tense changes. “See me set this vase on the table.” “He set his seal to the paper yesterday.” “Jones will not set the world on fire with his writings.” “Having set my affairs in order, I returned home.” “I sit down.” “I sat down.” “I set him down.”
There are many intransitive uses of the verb set; as, “The sun sets,” “The tide sets toward the south,” “The fruit has set,” “He set out for Boston.”
There is a difference of opinion as to whether we
should say “The coat sets well” or “The
coat sits well,” with the greater weight in favor
of sits. “The
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hen sits on her eggs.” “She is a sitting hen.” When the verb is used reflexively use set and not sat; as, “I set me down beside her,” not “I sat me down beside her.”
Anyhow