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120 lines
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120 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2558
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Title: HPR2558: Battling with English - part 1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2558/hpr2558.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 05:33:29
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2558 entitled Battling with English Part 1.
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It is hosted by Dave Morris and in about 11 minutes long and can in an explicit flag.
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The summary is misunderstanding about English drama, spelling, punctuation, etc.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hello everybody. This is Dave Morris. Welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm starting a series today which is not related to IT or tech or anything like that.
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This is one I'm calling Battling with English because I think English is a funny language.
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It's a complicated language and there are problems with ink like spelling and use of punctuation and that type of thing
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that I thought would be interesting we're useful to talk about.
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It's also been a discussion with Ken Fallon over a period of time and he sort of suggested I do this.
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So it's his fault. Though the English language is old as you realise and it's had a long history.
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It's changed or evolved in many ways over the years.
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It has come from a multitude of sources. Don't know them all myself.
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I know that there's quite a lot of French and Norwegian and German and that type of thing in it.
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Plus also other languages that you've been absorbed in from other parts of the world.
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So it's hard to say what's correct when it comes to English in an absolute way because it's moving.
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It's a moving target.
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So my example in the notes here was that when I was at school we were taught not to use the word nice.
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We shouldn't use that in written material and at that time it was becoming common to see things like
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I had a nice time meaning had a pleasant time and that seemed quite a bland sort of thing.
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And at that time or a bit later on actually in 1976 I've got a dictionary here which defines it as
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agreeable and this is marked as a colloquialism so it was a usage that was not regarded as main line
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mainstream. Nowadays you won't see that. It's pretty much mainstream usage so it's obviously changed
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over that period of time. It's used a wrong word in the wrong context.
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You might choose one that sounds similar to the word you want and there are also problems with
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spelling and spelling in English is not always logical. You might as I said before find punctuation
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confuses in particularly apostrophes. In this series I want to examine some of the problem areas
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and try and give you a means of remembering the right way if I can. I'm no authority on this.
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I've tried to teach myself not to make these mistakes over the years so I thought it might be
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useful just to share what I've learnt. I've put links into authorities who can give a definitive
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answer where I can't necessarily do so. I've put together notes here which in which I've tried
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to give various meanings of words and examples of them. I've also linked to the dictionaries and
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the etymology sources and stuff so you can go and look and research more once you've
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found stuff that you might want to check or memorize. I don't think I'm going to try and avoid
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reading all of these out because basically it's a list and I think it will make it very
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boring and I want to make these quite short episodes. So I'm going to skim over the lists
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to some extent and leave you to read the notes. So let's start with the case of using the wrong
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word. I'm one of the ones I see a lot on the web and in emails and so forth are then and then.
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There's definitions of both of these words. Start with then. Then is about time so you might say
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the lecture is that one I'll see you then or it might be sequence regarding a sequence of things.
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Add the eggs then mix thoroughly. You might also use it in the context of consequences.
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If we don't buy fuel here then we might not reach our destination. If this didn't work then I was
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all out of ideas. You might also see it in the context of something back in time so you might say
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I went to school in the 1960s and back then things were different. What it's often confused with
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is then. Now then is about comparisons mainly. So you might say am I taller than you or are you
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taller than me? You might say I talk about why you stuff is often better than you stuff. Other than
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fish, John eats no meat. Here's one from the HPR documentation on the website. We do not filter
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the shows in any way other than to check if they are audible and not blatant attempts at spam.
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You can also use it in a context where it means one thing happened after another. No sooner
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was the concrete poured than someone walked over it. What you'll often see is these words being
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used incorrectly. Somebody might say I like to listen to jazz every now and then. I'm not
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not noticed that they've used then rather than then but the expression should be now and then
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not now and then. Now and then means occasionally or every so often. You might also see something like
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wine is better than beer. What was meant there? Wine is better than beer. Because it's written
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sounds as if you drink some wine and then follow it would be a, which I think would be pretty
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unpleasant but it's a comparison. So that's all I'm going to say about then and then I hope that
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so give you some starters for if this is a thing that's that you find yourself being confused
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over that you'll find the the links here help you to get these separated in your mind.
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Here's another one where people confuse three words quite often. The three words are there
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spelled T H E R E, there T H E I R and there mean spelled T H E Y apostrophe R E. It sounds
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the same. Nobody yet that I know of anyway can separate these out by their sound. So it's very
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easy if you hear the words being spoken even if you sort of sang them in your head to choose the
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wrong one. But there T H E R E is about the placement of the thing. So you might say over there
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is the nearest pub. It's also used in calling somebody's attention, attracting somebody's attention,
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might say hey there be careful. Here's another one from HPR. HPR has existed for more than 10 years
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and there are over 2,500 shows in its archives. I think I found that. I might have made that one
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up actually. I'm not sure. So you can see there is about places or existence. There are other
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meanings which you can find if you follow the links. So let's look at the second one,
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there T H E I R. This is a possessive word. Here's one from HPR. The story of a Lancashire
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community and their high-speed network. So it's a possessive thing, their high-speed network.
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This one's from Ken Fallon's episode about B4RN, the high-speed network in amongst farms and
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small villages in Lancashire. The last one there is about T H E Y apostrophe R E is a contraction
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of they are. So you might say I was just at my friend's house, they're busy redecorating.
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Meaning they are busy redecorating. What you often see and what you shouldn't write is things
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like look over there where where the there is spelled T H E I R. What was meant was look over
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there the place, a location. It should have been T H E R E. Another example I climbed into the attic
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and there was a wasps nest there and this one's been spelled with a T H E Y apostrophe R E
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was a wasps nest there T H E I R. So the grammar's completely wrong in the sentence. I've made that
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up. I've never seen that particular one but you know you do see both of those things used
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incorrectly. The first one should have been T H E R E and so should the second one. So here's
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the last one in this particular episode and these are two words which sound very similar if they're
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not spoken in a very clear way. I was listening to somebody on a podcast saying this one of these
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words today and it was really hard to to to know whether they were saying the right one or not.
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And the words are tenet t-e-n-e-t and tenant t-e-n-a-n-t. So a tenet t-e-n-e-t is a principle or belief.
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So this is this one, this quote, this example is from the hacker ethic on Wikipedia. There's a link
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in the notes. The tenets of the hacker ethic are sharing openness, decentralization, free access
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to computers and world improvement. So tenet is the principle of the hacker ethic.
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The second one tenant t-e-n-a-n-t is either a person who rents land or property from a landlord
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or it's the act of occupying as a verb that is act of occupying the property. So you might say he
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used to rent some rooms over a shop but he didn't like being a tenant. You could also say,
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as an next second example, I used to tenant some rooms over a shop. One of the sites I often
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refer to is Grammar Girl who often gives useful hints about how to remember the difference between
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these words and as a link to her on in the notes here she suggests that remembering the tenant,
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the second one, where a person lives, ends with a-n-t and you might imagine that ants might also live
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there. That's a sort of silly mornick that sticks with me, I tell you, but maybe it will stick with
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you too, you might find it useful. If you if you get these confused you might not. So there's a
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couple of made up examples of getting it wrong. The tenet of Wild Fell Hall is not a novel by
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Anne Bronte, so that would mean the belief of Wild Fell Hall. It was tenant T-E-N-A-N-T,
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you see original book title, and also you would not say the tenets of the agarethic in my earlier
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example. It would mean the people who live inside the half of the agarethic, which does not make
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no sense. So that's it. I'm going to try and do quite short episodes in the future and just cover
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a few, few words, few concepts, and leave you turn to read further if you wish. I hope you find
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that useful. Okay then, bye.
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