Writers Tricks of the Trade Issue 3 Volume 9 | Page 22

Y OU D ON ’ T S AY ! U M —T HAT W ASN ’ T W HAT I M EANT W HAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU USE THE WRONG FORM OF A WORD B Y M IKE D ENNIS AND M ORGAN S T . J AMES Y EARS AGO M IKE AND M ORGAN WERE WORKING ON A PROPOSAL FOR A BOOK CALLED "Y OU D ON ' T S AY ." T HEY COMPLETED THE PROPOSAL , HAD A PUBLISHER INTERESTED , BUT IT NEVER HAPPENED . H OWEVER , IT WAS LOTS OF FUN WRITING THE COLUMN OF THAT NAME FOR EXAMINER . COM , AN INTERNET NEWSPAPER THAT LATER WENT OUT OF BUSINESS . This You Don’t Say column was the perfect addition to Hal Morris’ article on Page 16. O ne of the frustrations in life for a writer is to think they’ve got it right, only to have someone point out something like “The word should be stationery not stationary. See, one little letter changed the whole meaning. Instead of the woman grabbing a piece of writing paper, now you’ve said the woman grabbed a piece of not moving. Not exactly a brilliant statement, but it is a real word so how was SpellCheck to know? We’ve all read books, articles, descriptions and more filled with these faux pas. For that reason, try to be very attentive when it comes to proofing your work. Sure, your first readers might catch some or most of those errors, and F ALL 2019 editors generally have a built-in “right word detection radar,” but their job is so much easier and you look professional if you are on the alert. Remember, no one is perfect. If you’ve been using wrong word forms like these, pay attention! Always look up the syno- nyms or definitions when in doubt, but this is a little fun exercise. Marcy wanted to get their first, but Mil- ton and Myrtle picked up there bags before she could. Well, what you've said is Marcy wanted to get belongs to them first, Milton and Myrtle picked up that place bags. It is astounding how many people make this P AGE 18 W RITERS ’ T RICKS OF THE T RADE