Monthly Archives: March 2013

For Sale: Cd’s from the 80’s & 90’s

Everyone gets a kick out of wacky signs. From Leno to Lynne Truss, lots of folks have entertained us with signage that is confusing, misleading, or just plain wrong. The title of this post shows a common mistake seen on signs: the use of an apostrophe s where just an s is correct (Cds from the 80s & 90s).

I was driving past a wellness centre the other day when I saw a sign that made me snicker. The centre was advertising its services as being “co-ed and for women.” Just a tad redundant, I said to my daughter. But she saw things differently: the centre obviously had some classes for men and women together and other classes for women only. Bingo. I’m sure that is indeed the intended message, but it sure wasn’t clear to me on the initial reading.

A classic example of a sign that can be understood differently depending on the reader is “N0 Smoking Section.” Does this mean the establishment in question has a smoking section or not? Technically it means that there is not a smoking section. If there were a smoking section, the correct sign would read “No-smoking section.” That little hyphen makes a big difference. (Lynne Truss may have given this very example on her radio program about punctuation, if memory serves.)

I’ve always wondered about the companies that print business signs. Do they not employ editors? When a business requests a sign and there are obvious errors, doesn’t the printing company point the errors out and suggest alternatives? Coming soon to this blog: an exclusive exposé with all the answers.

The People That You Meet When You’re Walking Down the Street

It was last September. My youngest had started school full-time. I felt giddy with the freedom of it all. I spent midday at the AGO, ran errands all by myself (I forgot how quickly I could get stuff done sans kids!), perused library shelves at length, went out for coffee at that place I’d alwaysContinue Reading

Lean In and Tune Out

CBC Radio’s arts and culture program Q with Jian Ghomeshi aired an interview with Facebook CEO Sheryl Sandberg this morning. Sandberg’s new book, Lean In, advises women to embrace self-confidence. She says more women are needed in roles of power in the workplace so that women can make systemic changes. But to get there, womenContinue Reading

Your Usage is Showing

Today the Huffington Post tweeted an old article on usage by editor Zoe Triska. The subject: nauseated vs. nauseous. That’s a good one that has confused me before. Most editors are well versed in the usual usage suspects: alternate/alternative, loath/loathe, flaunt/flout, historic/historical, principal/principle, farther/further, and so on. One usage distinction that recently came to my attentionContinue Reading

What’s Your Brand?

I initially felt rather cynical about attending the career workshops on offer at Ryerson University, but it turns out I’ve found them very helpful. My big take-away (for you pedants: the way I just used take-away is not correct according to the Canadian Oxford Dictionary): creating my own personal brand is a requirement. Yup, just the kindContinue Reading

Shifts in Prepositions

I recently created a business card combining my passions for editing and lifting. I called my freelance business “heavylifting editorial services,” and I set the phrase raising the bar for communication above a logo of a barbell. But I guess raising the bar has its origins in track and field (high jump, vaulting), so I’veContinue Reading

The Perfect Word

Since I wrecked my knee last fall, I’ve noticed that there are many references to standing strong in the Bible and in the writings of the saints. When you’ve experienced the vulnerability of unreliable footing, these references take on personal significance and become personal meditations. Sometimes one or two words can make all the differenceContinue Reading

Subject-Verb Agreement

How hard can this be, right? Singular subjects take singular verb forms, and plural subjects take plural verb forms: Jane runs. Jane and Spot run. But sometimes it’s tricky. Consider the following pairs of sentences, the first from Amy Einsohn’s Copyeditor’s Handbook, the second from Strunk and White’s Elements of Style (if memory serves): The onlyContinue Reading

The Mothers 2

CBC radio’s The Current got into the fray today concerning Mayer’s face-time edict for Yahoos. The show asked “if working from home was really working.” And the consensus was that full-time work from home is undesirable (as shown in studies), but part-time work from home can result in greater productivity because workers have choice in how andContinue Reading

The Mothers

The mommy wars are back in the media again with Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer apparently banning staff from working from home because lack of face time can restrict the spontaneous sharing of ideas that generates the next big thing. And Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg has extolled young women to stop worrying about work-life balance before they even needContinue Reading