Personal: June 2007 Archives
Brian Clark has published two articles at CopyBlogger.com that cover some simple mistakes we make when writing. Since I’m always trying to improve my writing skills, I thought I’d pass on these useful tips.
- Your vs. You’re
- It’s vs. Its
- There vs. Their
- Affect vs. Effect
- The Dangling Participle
- Loose vs. Lose
- Me, Myself, and I
- Different than vs. Different from
- Improper Use of the Apostrophe
- Parallelism
- i.e. vs. e.g.
- Could of, Would of, Should of
I remember learning a few of these from my grandmother when I was a kid. My mom always spoke of my grandmother as being extremely good at writing, and particular about it too. So I started trying to write better, and I guess it’s stuck with me.
This is a song for all the fathers and grandpas in our lives:
The kids saw my old Axis and Allies game box today and really wanted to play. So we open it up and then, while my wife distracted the 2 year old, spent nearly 3 hours sorting the pieces, setting up the game, and playing 2 full rounds. The picture is what the game board looked like at the end.
I helped them understand the rules and how the pieces move, and suggested most of their moves for them. But I was surprised at how long their interest lasted. For a game that’s labeled for “ages 12 and up,” I thought a 7 and 4 year old did pretty well.