
Monday, February 01, 2010
Women's/Womens

Coach Ad

This was in Saline County, Arkansas' Lifestyle magazine.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Who/Whom


My scanner met a terrible end a few months ago, and I haven't purchased another. I used my webcam to capture these images. My apologies for the poor image quality. These advertisements each have a mistake in the use of who where whom should have been used. Who is a subject pronoun. Whom is an object pronoun. When working with questions, it is often easier to re-order the words into a declarative sentence. For example, "Who will you get your flu shot for?" could be re-written, "You will get your flu shot for who." In the rewriting, I think it is easier to see that who is working as an object of the preposition FOR; therefore, the writer should have used the objective form, which is WHOM. The first ad should read, "For whom will you get your flu shot?" In the second advertisement, "Who will you meet at Tech?" should be re-worded to say, "You will meet who at Tech." In this sentence, who is working as a direct object; therefore the objective pronoun whom is needed.
A trick that I sometimes teach my students is to substitute another subject/object pronoun pair in the place of who/whom. For example, they/them. For most people, "You will get your flu shot for they/them" is a simple choice. Most people would choose them, the object pronoun; therefore, since whom is also an object pronoun, whom is the correct choice.**Oddly, in the previous sentence, whom is being used as a subject.
I know that most people don't care one way or another about the who/whom dilemma. The argument usually revolves around the idea that meaning is the most important part of communication, and if the reader understands either who or whom in a given sentence, it doesn't matter which word is used. Indeed, that is a slippery slope.
Honestly, I believe that in a few generations whom will have gone the way of thee and thou.
**I typed this quickly and while tired and sick, so correct my grammar here. It is only fair. People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.
Friday, January 22, 2010
Cliche vs. Glitch

I received this reply from the company that makes MoxieGirlz. I laughed out loud when I read this because I immediately tried to decide which cliche was causing trouble in the company's system. Which cliche was it? Keep your fingers crossed, God willin' and the creek don't rise, shoot for the moon, wish upon a star, all's well that end's well, cash in your chips, when push comes to shove, or ants in his pants. My only glimmer of hope is that cliche is a technology term and there really can be a cliche in a computer system. I suspect that the writer intended to say that there was a glitch in the system.
Monday, December 28, 2009
B.Jaxx Website Mistake
Unnecessary Quotation Marks
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Candy Store Mistake

Saturday, October 24, 2009
Benton Flea Market Billboard
For several weeks, I have been planning to take a picture of these billboards. The mistake I was planning to expose is the word "crossover." It seems to me that when used as a verb and a preposition, it should be written "cross over." When used to identify the class of automobiles known as a cross between a car and an SUV, "crossover" should be used since it is a noun.
Trying to guess what the mistake is in the sign, my daughter pointed out that the apostrophe in "SUNDAY'S" isn't supposed to be there. Her reasoning was based on the fact that there are no apostrophes in the other days of the week on the sign. Chip off the old block. ;)
Monday, October 19, 2009
Cage Fighting
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Burtha's and Bubbah's
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