Subject: [Tweeters] RE:words, words, words...
Date: Apr 27 18:41:14 2009
From: Will Clemons - willclemons at yahoo.com



Burt's linguistic cite on the Tweters site, was quite a sight to see.

Tomorrow, I think I shall go to a birdy site and hope for at least one wondrous sight. Upon my return I shall cite my sight on the Tweeters site.

Will Clemons
SW of Portland
willclemons AT Yahoo dot com

Birding:
The best excuse for getting outdoors
And avoiding chores

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Subject: words, words, words
From: "Guttman,Burton" <GuttmanB AT evergreen.edu>
Date: Mon, 27 Apr 2009 16:24:12 -0700

Oh, I know I'm gonna get my ass rapped for this, and people are going to call me a snob and a jerk and all kinds of other things. But, friends, I think of the good folks on Tweeters as intelligent and well-educated, and mistakes in language are beneath them. And, also, I can't stand to let English go down the drain any more than it has already.


Friends and colleagues, there are three homophones in English that we must not keep confusing:

1. sight: as a verb, to see something; as a noun, something one has seen. "I sighted a Merlin overhead."

2. site: as a noun, a certain place, such as the place where building stands; as a verb, to place something on a site, as, "We are going to site the memorial on this site."

3. cite: only a verb, meaning (1) to call on someone to appear, as before a court; (2) to quote or mention as an example or authority; (3) to mention formally for commendation or praise; or (4) to call to someone's attention.


Okay, go ahead and shoot. But it's really distressing to have intelligent
people tell us that they've "sited" an interesting bird. If we don't maintain some standards for our language, pretty soon we'll have like people y'know like saying that they saw this like interesting bird.


Cheers,
Burt

Burt Guttman
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505 guttmanb AT evergreen.edu
Home: 7334 Holmes Island Road S. E., Olympia, 98503