How to Not Write Bad: The Most Common Writing Problems and the Best Ways to Avoidthem (11 page)

BOOK: How to Not Write Bad: The Most Common Writing Problems and the Best Ways to Avoidthem
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[
I’m a person that likes to laugh.
]

I’m a person who likes to laugh.

3.
STILL WRONG

Certain grammatical mistakes are commonly made in spoken but not written English, and thus won’t be addressed at length in this book. Examples include
ain’t; of
instead of
have
in expressions like
He could of come; them
instead of
those
in expressions like
one of them things;
and regionalisms like
He done wrecked the car.
The one that probably comes up the most—as it’s a feature of many nonstandard dialects, including African-American Vernacular
English—is a transposition of past and participle forms of irregular verbs.

[
He seen it coming.
]

He saw it coming.

[
I had went to watch that movie when it first come out.
]

I had gone to watch that movie when it first came out.

a. Subjunctive

The subjunctive mood has been losing sway in the English language over the centuries, but it’s still got some sway left. Basically, the subjunctive calls for a shift in the verb
to be
in reference to untrue scenarios; the word
if
is usually a giveaway.

[
If I was you, I would take that class.
]

If I were you, I would take that class.

Note that if the scenario followed by
if
is not necessarily untrue—that is, if it’s in doubt—the standard past tense is called for, and the subjunctive is hypercorrection.

[
I asked him if he were happy with our marriage.
]

I asked him if he was happy with our marriage.

[
Check what’s in the refrigerator to find out if he were in the house last night.
]

Check what’s in the refrigerator to find out if he was in the house last night.

b. Like (III)

Like
still doesn’t cut the mustard when it’s followed by
in
:

[
Like in France, American TV is a case of dumb and dumber.
]

As in France, American TV is a case of dumb and dumber.

That’s an easy fix, but a comparable misuse of
unlike
is more challenging.

[
Unlike in the higher atmospheres, airplanes frequently encounter turbulence when they’re about to land.
]

Airplanes often run into turbulence when they’re about to land. That’s not true in higher atmospheres.

c. (Don’t) Let ’Em Dangle

A similar
like
mistake is:

[
Like his first trial, Morgan was acquitted.
]

Again, the fix is to use
as in:

As in his first trial, Morgan was acquitted.

This error is an example of a dangling modifier. Here are some more examples from students’ writing:

[
By including several charts along with the story, readers are encouraged to understand the long-term trends.
]

[
Being the most spectacular event of the year, newspapers were obligated to devote major coverage to the hurricane.
]

[
As an expert on fiscal recovery, his comments were listened to with intense interest.
]

[
By reversing the color scheme, the eye is captured.
]

[
Claiming to be a simple man leading an ordinary life of a male as he enjoys watching football with his buddy’s, Smith’s lifestyle is far from ordinary
]. (For
buddy’s,
see “Apostrophes,”
II.B.1
.)

(From a review of a new bra by Victoria’s Secret) [
Sitting in class or dancing at the bar, the bra performed well…Though slightly pricey, your breasts will thank you.
]

The grammatical problem in those sentences (and I apologize if I seem to be stating the obvious) is that
Morgan
didn’t resemble his first trial;
readers
didn’t include the charts;
newspapers
were not the most spectacular event; the eye doesn’t reverse the color scheme;
his comments
were not an expert;
Smith’s lifestyle
didn’t claim to be a simple man;
the bra
doesn’t sit in class or dance at a bar; and the reader’s
breasts
are not pricey. (Pause for snarky comment.) In each case, the italicized word or phrase is the subject of the sentence, and the opening phrase—up to the comma, that is—has to modify, describe, or characterize the subject and nothing but the subject.

To get technical for just a minute, I’ll note that this is a problem only with introductory
phrases
(which do not contain a subject and verb), not
clauses
(which do). So there is no dangler issue in the following:

Since he is running for mayor next year, he is resigning all his board memberships.
(Opens with dependent clause.)

Kris is the starting center on the basketball team, but Jessica wants to replace her.
(Opens with independent clause.)

An interesting thing about danglers is that a rather select group of writers commit them: the minority who would even
attempt
a complex sentence. They haven’t quite mastered the skill of putting one of these together, and thus can get themselves in rather spectacular trouble, but at least they realize that this level of complexity is, as Hamlet said, a consummation devoutly to be wished.

Relevant as well is that danglers are very common—and, to a certain extent, acceptable—in speech. When talking, some “mistakes”
are okay. Did you notice that the previous sentence has a dangling modifier (mistakes don’t talk)? In conversation, I bet you wouldn’t. As another example, let’s suppose I’m speaking with someone who’s an expert in ancient religion, and I say: “As an expert in ancient religion, I wonder what you think of devil worship.” That is a dangling modifier: “I” am not a religion expert. In speech, we give this a pass. In writing, we—and by
we
I mean the professors and editors of the world—do not.

That’s unfortunate, because danglers spring incessantly from many writers’ fingers; it takes a substantial amount of discipline and rigor to prune them from our prose. (If you haven’t guessed, I am one of those writers.) Consequently, much more so than the other errors on my list, they show up in well-respected publications, such as the
New York Times Book Review
(
rather than providing the meticulous examination of the process of looking…we are treated to rhetorical flights that provide little perspective of any useful kind
), the
New Yorker
(
A major political donor, his greatest concern is to protect Israel
), and the
Chronicle of Higher Education
(
Having made it successfully through all three gantlets, all of the rejections I experienced along the way have become only vague memories
).

How to avoid danglers? A simple strategy will help you smoke these bad boys out. First of all, you have to recognize sentences that have this structure: MODIFIER-COMMA-SUBJECT-VERB. The vast majority of the time, the part of such a sentence before the comma will either:

  • Begin with
    Like, Unlike,
    or
    As
    . (Example:
    Like most of the student body, Rogoff has spent an inordinate amount of time avoiding hard classes.
    )
  • Contain a gerund, that is, a verb in the
    —ing
    form. (
    Being an inquisitive sort, I wonder what you ate for breakfast.
    )
  • Begin with the infinitive form of a verb. (
    To maximize your chances of losing weight, you should avoid fried food.
    )
  • Begin with one or more participles. (
    Shaken and not stirred, James Bond’s martinis are a twentieth-century icon.
    )
  • Consist of a noun phrase. (
    A popular mayor, Potter is running unopposed for reelection.
    )

Once you recognize the sentence, circle the subject, the modifier, and the verb. Then see if it makes sense if you keep all the elements but change the order to this: SUBJECT-COMMA-MODIFIER-COMMA-VERB. If it does—as in all of the examples above—you’re good to go. If it doesn’t, you have a dangler.

So take one of my students’ troubled sentences:

[
Being the most spectacular event of the year, newspapers devoted major coverage to the hurricane.
]

Shifted, it would be:

[
Newspapers, being the most spectacular event of the year, devoted major coverage to the hurricane.
]

Obviously no good. There are any number of ways to fix this sentence. Probably the best thing to do is to follow the student’s original instinct and start with the hurricanes. So:

The hurricane was the most spectacular event of the year, and newspapers devoted major coverage to it.

To make matters even more complicated, danglers are sometimes okay.

That sentence is an example of a certain class of opening modifiers, sometimes referred to as
sentence adverbs
, that get a pass when it comes to the whole dangling-modifier question. These are words or phrases that, rather than modify the subject, convey the speaker’s or writer’s attitude, or generally characterize the content of the rest of the sentence. For example:

Fortunately, the game will go on as scheduled.

To be perfectly honest, that course is pure hogwash.

Summing up this section, it’s pretty easy to spot a dangling modifier.

d. Parallel Universes

The parallelism problem crops up most commonly in lists. You want to make sure that every item is in the same basic form.

[
I like to hike, play disk golf, and just goofing off.
]

In the example above, the phrase
I like to
applies to the first two items in the list, but is mysteriously dropped for the third. As the Beatles once sang, “You can’t do that.” So change to:

I like hiking, playing disk golf, and just goofing off.

Sometimes, you need to just be listless:

[
He has experience in copyediting, graphics, and has won two professional awards.
]

He has experience in copyediting and graphics, and has won two professional awards.

The alluring phrase
as well as
creates a parallel problem in 1, below. It’s technically fixed in 2, but the sentence is awkward (a word you will run into again in
Part III
, many times).

1. [
World AIDS Day is devoted to spreading further awareness of HIV and AIDS, as well as a time of remembrance for the millions who have died because of the virus.
]

2. [
World AIDS Day is devoted to spreading further awareness of HIV and AIDS and is a time of remembrance for the millions who have died because of the virus.
]

3.
World AIDS Day is devoted to spreading further awareness of HIV and AIDS. It’s a time of remembrance for the millions who have died because of the virus.

e. The Sports Conditional

This isn’t exclusively found in a sports context, but for some reason, athletes, fans, and commentators are unaccountably drawn to the phrase
would have
in considering scenarios that didn’t happen.

[
If Johnson would have caught that ball, the Bisons would have won the game.
]

If Johnson had caught the ball, the Bisons would have won the game.

The sports conditional seems particularly irresistible when wishing or hoping is involved:

“I wish I would have took a swing at that ball,” Prendergast said.

Well, you can’t change a quotation, but if Prendergast were
writing
his sentiments, the correct grammar would be:

I wish I had taken a swing at that ball.

Not technically an error, but pretty hackneyed, is “the sports present,” in which athletes and sportswriters recite hypothetic or conditional events in the present tense.

[
If he makes that interception, the whole game changes.
]

If he had made that interception, the whole game would have changed.

f. Between You and I, This One Bears Some Study

Take a look at this sentence and try to spot the problem word:

[
It would be great if you could come to the concert with my wife and I.
]

It’s the shortest and final one,
I.
Traditional grammar dictates that it should be replaced with
me,
on the principle that prepositions (such as
with
) are followed by the objective (
me
) rather than the subjective case (
I
).

BOOK: How to Not Write Bad: The Most Common Writing Problems and the Best Ways to Avoidthem
4.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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