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Basically, these adverbs are actually useless This doctor has no abbreviation A little dash of this, a little dash of that... Yeah, I am happy to let you know. Yea! The little dash: the hyphen Learn how to not trip up or run to the period How does this [impact / have an impact on] you? What’s new in the wide, wide world of English? Did he get any sleep or not? Now, how many days does "every" mean? September 07 October 07 November 07 December 07 January 08 February 08 March 08 April 08 May 08 June 08 July 08 August 08 September 08 October 08 November 08
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What’s new in the wide, wide world of English?
“Wide” is a confusing suffix, those endings of words that define more closely what the word means. Ha! There, I have simply explained a suffix.
If you look up “suffix” in the American College Dictionary, Third edition, you’ll find this definition: “An affix added to the end of a word or stem, serving to form a new word or functioning as an inflectional ending, such as –ness to gentleness or –s in sits.”
Wow! Did you get that? What the heck is an “affix”? It means to put an ending to something. That’s all.
OK. Back to the point of this blog: -wide is a suffix that many don’t know how to attach to a word.
First, there is no hyphen involved when adding –wide to a word. For example, city-wide is incorrect.
All you have to do is attach the suffix. Examples: citywide, communitywide, nationwide, worldwide, countywide, countrywide, corporatewide, companywide, and many more.
If your spell check does not recognize these words, your spellchecker is wrong. You should educate your machine.
2 comments from 2 users
1
posted by
marksremarks
on Feb 26, 2008 at 01:01 PM
posted by
Rebecca
on Mar 2, 2008 at 09:42 AM
1
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