"Crimes" is a little harsh.
"You're Probably Committing" is a bit harsh too in some cases. Though the piece is quite a mix of genuine errors (grammatical or otherwise), stylistic advice, and pet peeves with nothing behind them but a personal prejudice...
#1 Agreed, but it's a stylistic point rather than a "grammar mistake". There's nothing ungrammatical about shouting! Even if you do so in every sentence!
#2 Is this really a "crime" that we're "probably committing"? I'd have thought most people get over that one in school. Lose vs loose seems to be much more prevalent in the text I read online. But it's arguably a spelling fault rather than a grammar one.
#3 I don't think this is a hard-and-fast rule at all. I'm sure you could find a sackful of examples - by the best writers - of "that" being used to refer to a person. If it were an error, it would be a grammatical one, but I don't think it's an error at all.
#4 Another personal preference masquerading as a grammar "rule". Either "It" or "they" is acceptable to refer to a corporation in my view.
#5 I think this one is probably true, though I think it's possible to construct exceptions to it: "Joe was awarded the title Vice President of Martketing last week". A typographical issue rather than grammar.
#6 Typography not grammar. Not sure of it's status in the universal rule vs. personal preference stakes either.
#7 Absolutely right - and increasingly prevalent in the era of the spell-check. But it's spelling and not grammar.
#8 A pretty well-established rule, dating from 1770 according to
Wikipedia, and - wonder of wonders - it's even a genuine grammar issue. Mind you, apparently the
The Cambridge Guide to English Usage describes the choice "between the more formal fewer and the more spontaneous less" as a stylistic choice. If you use "less" when Ms Lyons would use "fewer", you're only going to ring alarm bells among pedants.
#9 Utter tosh.
Dictionary.com lists 21 prepositional uses of "over", including such
not-the-opposite-of-under examples as "to hit someone over the head", "a big improvement over last year's turnout", "to quarrel over a matter", and, yes, "not over five dollars".
I don't even see how the statement "Over is the opposite of under" leads her to conclude that "it shouldn't describe number or quantity". Why on Earth not? Over can be an antonym for under, it can also be a synonym for "more than", it can be both at the same time, and (as shown in the examples above) it can be neither. Isn't English great?
#10 A horrid word that I'd personally never use. But it's a real one, and one that dictionaries should be including. The purpose of a dictionary is to describe the language as it is used - so you can go and look up unfamiliar words to find what they mean. It's not there to act as a doorkeeper for "proper words". If we're collecting ugly and pointless words, I'd add "utilise" to the list.
-- Chris Hunt
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Extra Connections Ltd