Archive for October, 2008

The fall of we shall in a dot net world

Monday, October 27th, 2008

Grammarian Castle was going on-line. Or, as they told everyone, they were going dot-net

The knight-errant had spent the previous weeks installing a wireless Internet connection for the castle. Late into the evening, the lights burned as tour writers, Lady Bea and Lady Kay, toiled over the copy for their website.

They hit an impasse. In order to build excitement about their castle, the forest and their fascinating workshops on writing, they wanted to write, we shall”. The formal first-person verb seemed, well, so formal, and not in keeping with the fast-paced pizzazz of the new electronic world.

You know dear, I think we should say, we will, said Lady Kay.
But thats not right, replied Lady Bea.
Well seek the guidance of the Lady of the Word, said the first.

They walked into the forest to find the strange and often erratic Lady of the Word, a former communications maven who had been driven mad by improper English usage. She still had lucid moments and they hoped to catch her at a good moment. Even the slightest hint that a sacred rule of language was being breached could send the Lady of the Word into frenzy.

As it happened, the Lady of the Word was in fine spirits. In the past, she had often driven herself to distraction while pondering the use of shall and will. Today she felt up to the challenge.

Well, she said, we do have to move with the times, especially on the net. Shed never actually seen the computer, having lost her mind when blue pencils were still a copy editors favourite tool. She did like to see herself as ‘au currant’.

You know I always loved the cadence of ‘we shall’, she sighed. Then the Lady of the Word began to drift backward in time and our writers feared the lucidity was passing.

The Lady of the Word regained her composure and added, But that was then and this is now. I have a lot of time to think as I wander around here. More and more people now say I will and we will and Im getting used to it. In fact, unless someone has an English accent, I shall’ sounds very pompous.

They all agreed. But it was hard to part from the old ways, even for top billing on a search engine, so they decided to compromise. I have a couple of suggestions, said Lady Kay, I think we should use the contraction, well, or convert what we are writing to the present tense instead.

Good idea, replied Lady Bea, Even though we used to think it was bad form to use a contraction in public documents, this is a new frontier. And often, the use of the present tense makes ones writing clearer anyway.”

Unfortunately the creeping use of contractions in formal writing was one of the changes that had unhinged the Lady of the Word. She ran off into the Enchanted Forest screaming about the decline of language and the ladies of Grammarian Castle trudged back across the drawbridge to launch their site.

Copywrite 1998 Beth Parker & Kate Rodd

“You and I and you and me” – Chapter sample, Grammar Book

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

It was a dark and stormy night. Through the fog there rode a tall, knight on a large horse. The strange visitor knocked three times on the castle.

“Who is it?” the mysterious Lady asked, peaking through a small crack in the large, wooden door.

“It is I”, the voices answered back.

“You mean,” she corrected, “It is me.”

She sensed some hesitation on the part of the knight.

” Never say ‘it is I’”, the Lady continued, “Always say It is me’. ‘Me is the object of the sentence, not the subject.”

“Huh”, answered the tall stranger, now totally disarmed, “What are you talking about?”

So the Lady got out a white board and began a short lesson:

Most people get it wrong. Or as soon as they try and say it, they correct themselves and fumble on the words. How do you know when to say “you and me” instead of “you and I”? It has to do with subjects, objects, nouns and verbs. There is, however, an easy way of making sure you always get it right.

You try the sentence out using only the reference to yourself. Let me show you.

Which is correct?
A Brittany and I went to the show.
B Brittany and me went to the show.
Try the sentence without Brittany. Obviously, the right version is
A Brittany and I went to the show.

Another example:
A Give the salad to Rocco and me, OR
B Give the salad to Rocco and I.
Drop Rocco (if you dare), and the answer is obvious.
B Give the salad to me.

Now I will give you the technical explanation.

“I”‘ is the first person pronoun, used when the first person is the subject of a sentence. ”Me” is the first person pronoun, used when the first person is the object of a sentence. Every sentence has a subject (comes before the verb) and an object (comes after the verb).

Billy walked his dog around the block. (Billy is the subject, dog is the object)

So you always say Billy and I walked our dog around the block.

OR

Billy walked his dog and me around the block.

So when we get back to our story of the tall dark knight at the gate, although it may sound more impressive to answer, “It is I!”, the correct way to answer would be to say, “It is me.”

The knight then took a deep breath and knocked again at the castle door.

“Who is it?” inquired the mysterious Lady, now smiling proudly.

“It is a knight”, he replied with care.

FOR MORE MAGAZINE AND BOOK IDEAS
CONTACT ME DIRECTLY.

Beth Parker
Professional Writer
www.bethparker.com

President, CAWEE
Canadian Association of Women Executives & Entrepreneurs
June 2008-June 2010