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Monday, September 24, 2012

For All You Mullygrubbers!

mullygrub (verb)
mullygrubs (moody noun)
mullygrubber (person to avoid)

The word mullygrubs came up on NPR recently and befuddled many people — both reporters and listeners. This is one of the best one-word descriptions alive (barely); it is attached to those moody, lackadaisical, gloomy, annoying people who just collywobble around, bringing negative energy to everyone.

If that isn’t enough to keep you away (or to keep you from becoming one), know that collywobble is a verb meaning to “belly-ache” (derived from “collic” and “stomach ache”). Got it?

Where the term mullygrub comes from is equally interesting (to us word geeks). An Aussie reports that a mullygrub is a cricket noun, referring to a bowled ball that “just rolls along the ground, keeping the batsman from scoring more than one run”, and therefore turning the defeated bowler into a collywobbler who resorts to any method to win with no consideration of long-term results. (Sounds as if it should be part of U.S. political grammar.)

Wait! There’s more! The word mully is a variant of muley, which refers to cattle with no horns. And how do hornless cattle behave without a means of defense? They get the mullygrubs, which turns them into very blah animals — thus mullygrubbers — blue, sad, down in the dumps.

Don’t be a mullygrubber! Forget the collywobbles and get out there and throw a party, ride a roller coaster, ask an attractive person out to dine, run naked through the stre... no, better skip that last one!

Saturday, September 15, 2012

How Many Things Can You Break?

You can break a rule, a glass, an egg, a heart, a leg, your neck, a promise, a record, the bank at Monte Carlo, a $20 bill, the ice…

You can break in, out, up, down, into, even, wind, curfew, step, silence…

You can break up a fight, into the light, in new shoes, in a new assistant, out of jail, out of the blues, down in the rain, up in pain, into a bank, into song, into a sweat…

You can take a break, make a break, fake a break, shake a break (or is that shake and break?)…

Breaker! Breaker! Break!

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

A Relaxed Afternoon

Read this sentence carefully:
Soothed by the music, the afternoon was spent reading.
If you read it literally — the way it’s written — you have to assume that the afternoon was what was soothed by the music. BECAUSE: what follows an opening clause (soothed by the music) has to be the subject that is “soothed”. Ask: “Who is soothed by the music?” And remember to use the comma. Try this:
Soothed by the music, the angry teenager spent the afternoon reading.
Or
Soothed by the music, the feisty princess decided to throw a party.
 Or
Soothed by the music, the lazy police sergeant forgot to draw his gun.
 Or
Soothed by the music, the rebellious third graders spent the afternoon reading.
 Do you remember that a clause needs a verb? You get a gold star!

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Define the Mighty “It”

  1. It is raining.
  2. It looks like a nice day.
  3. It was a dark and stormy night.
  4. It made me angry.
  5. It was three in the morning.
  6. It felt like doom.
  7. It is hot in here.
  8. It turns out she was his wife.
  9. It happens to be true.
  10. It is time to quit.

The Elephant in the Middle of the Room

I’ll bet you’ve never asked yourself the question, why do I need a style manual? Yet, bookstores and libraries offer shelves full of them. And no two are alike. Duh! That’s because each was written to apply to a certain publication — not yours. The Podunk Tribune, too lazy to write its own style manual, may choose the AP Style Manual and add its own touches, making it the Podunk Tribune Style Manual.

You, Mr. or Ms. Writer, can do the same thing. Or… you can write your own from scratch. Pull out a spiral notebook or open a computer file, title it My (your name) Style Manual and begin making notes.
Decide which words you want to capitalize;
Decide how you’ll spell certain words;
Write down definitions to remind yourself; list the characters of your next book;
Design a location for your story;
Keep track of your characters birthdays, ages, appearance. 
Oh the many entries you can make. In time — a very short time — you will have a bulging notebook. If you are a prolific writer, you may want to start a new style manual for each project, keeping the primary manual for general writing notes.

Congratulations! Now you are the author of Your Style Manual!

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Opal Pickles, my new old friend

Few comic page characters do more for grammar than Opal Pickles, the AARPer who harasses her husband with her grammar annoyances. This week she was ranting about people who write “web sight” insead of “website”. At first glance, I thought she referred to using two words rather than one; then I checked the spelling. Me too, Opal. Hate it!

Her other annoyances included the misuse of the verbs “lay” and “lie”, and folks who write “low and behold” instead of “lo and behold”. I admit, I hadn’t thought much about that last one until dear Opal called it to my attention.

Did I mention that Opal’s words come from Brian Crane? Great artist with reverence for the language.

Monday, September 3, 2012

A Perfect Sentence

Some consider learning grammar a sentence beyond the realm of “reasonable punishment”, but the Grammar Anarchist says “Phooey and balderdash!” Grammar is easy as pie when you pick up the basics. The following sentence contains all the parts of speech. Can you identify them?

Hungered by eons of fasting, Adam slowly but (ugh!) eagerly 
reached for the very juicy apple.

Give it a try before checking the comments for my answers. (Yours could be different and remain acceptable.)