So often, I look at something I wrote in the past and think, "What the hell was I thinking" (calling that a quotation or telling people to hyphenate bee pollen or whatever the hell nonsense I'd been talking the hour, day, or week before). So thanks for sparing me the worry that I was talkin' drivel once again.
4 comments:
Five syllable attributions are pretty horrific. Isn't the idea to be less intrusive?
Hmmm. Now I'm rethinkin' whether something not in quotation marks actually qualifies as a quotation. What ev. It's Friday night.
But re the larger question of whether it stinks: I agree that they should be less intrusive.
And the idiom I know is to "elaborate on" something. Not to elaborate something.
Besides, that definition of "elaborate" isn't really a transitive verb anyway.
All this fuss just because a feature writer wanted to use something fancier than "added."
I think the grammar book we use at school calls that an indirect quotation, so I have no problems with your terminology.
And yeah, if he really wanted to use "elaborate" it would require probably some re-working of the sentences around it.
Silly feature writers!
Ah, thanks. That helps.
So often, I look at something I wrote in the past and think, "What the hell was I thinking" (calling that a quotation or telling people to hyphenate bee pollen or whatever the hell nonsense I'd been talking the hour, day, or week before). So thanks for sparing me the worry that I was talkin' drivel once again.
: )
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