Commonly Confused
Words
and Their Meanings: A-K
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A
A A A A A
Addition,
Edition
Addition |
A
summation. Adding something up. |
In
addition to spraining his wrist, Blair had three cracked ribs, numerous contusions,
fifteen stitches in his forehead, and a concussion. |
Edition |
A
newspaper issue. A reprinting of a newspaper. A release of a magazine or newspaper. |
The
current edition of 'The Cascade Sun Times' carried a picture of the following people from
the Cascade Police Department: Simon Banks, Captain of Major Crimes; James Ellison, a
detective in Banks' unit; and Blair Sandburg, the police observer assigned to Detective
Ellison. |
Affect,
Effect
Affect |
To act
upon; impress; influence. To touch emotionally. To imitate or counterfeit. To attack or
attaint. To have a liking for. To imitate or counterfeit. To tend toward naturally. To
aspire for or to. |
The
murder of the little girl affected Jim to the point where he mindlessly pounded his fist
into the wall until it was bloody, then he went after the killer. |
Effect |
A result
of some cause or agency. A consequence. The gist of a statement. To bring about. To
accomplish. Fact or reality. Gist of a statement. Moveable goods. Mental state or attitude
resulting from observation or external impression. |
The
effect of the governor's order was a state wide crackdown on child killers. The final effect: child murders were reduced by twenty
percent, thanks to one very determined Sentinel. |
Allowed,
Aloud -- These sound alike words are often
confused.
Allowed |
To permit
to occur or do. To admit. To make an addition or deduction. |
"Aren't
I allowed any sort of comment?" Blair whispered, softly. |
Aloud |
To speak
out loud or in a tone of voice for others present to hear what is said. |
"Always,
Chief," Jim said aloud. |
A lot,
Alot, Allot
A lot |
More than
a few. |
Jim shook
his head at Blair's antics; he obfuscated a lot. |
Alot |
This is
not a word. |
'Alot'
should never be used; it isn't a word. |
Allot |
To assign
by lot. To apportion. To grant. |
Reading
down the list, Simon checked the items he wanted to allot to his best team. |
All
right, Alright
All right |
Satisfactory.
Correct. Uninjured. Certainly, without a doubt. Yes. |
"You
all right, Sandburg?" Jim asked, kneeling next to the anthropologist. "Yeah, Jim," Blair mumbled painfully, holding
his head. "I'm just peachy." |
Alright |
All
right: a spelling not yet considered acceptable. This would be considered slang and
should be used sparingly in dialogue, and only if the character speaking is using slang. |
'Alright'
should not be used consistently, or in place of, the phrase 'all right' in description. It
should never be used in formal writing. |
And, & -- Another of my 'big' pet peeves.
The '&' symbol should not be used in prose or dialogue unless it is the proper part of
a name or phrase.
And |
A
connecting word |
Jim and
Blair had spinach and liver for dinner. (Yuck!) |
& |
The sign
for the word 'and'. Don't use
symbols when writing unless they're already part of a title or address. |
"Proctor
& Gamble," Jim mumbled, reading the label. Jim and Blair ran to the blue pickup truck, jumping in and
speeding after the murder suspect. |
Anyone,
Any one
Anyone |
An
indefinite pronoun. It means 'any person at all.' |
Looking
frantically through the crowd, Blair couldn't find anyone he knew. |
Any one |
The
pronoun 'one' preceded by the adjective 'any', refers to a particular person or thing in a
group. |
Any one
of the detectives in Major Crimes would have been more than happy lend Blair a helping
hand. |
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B
B B B B B
Badly, Bad
Badly |
An
adverb. Improperly. Imperfectly. Unpleasantly. Harmfully. |
Blair
aimed the gun badly, hitting Rafe's target instead of his own. |
Bad |
An
adjective. Not good. Unpleasant. Inadequate. Lacking skill. Rotten. Immoral. |
Jim
snatched the gun from Blair's hand. His aim was so bad, Jim was afraid he'd shoot off his
own foot, or worse, Jim himself. |
Blairs/Jims/Simons,
Blair's/Jim's/Simon's; friends, friend's; Babies, Baby's; brothers, brothers' -- in other words: possessives versus plurals.
Blairs/Jims/Simons |
Plural |
Wow!
Someone cloned Blair. There are now enough Blairs that every woman in fandom can have her
very own! |
Blair's/Jim's/Simon's |
Possessive |
It's
Blair's hair, you may only have a lock of it if you ask him politely. |
Friends |
Plural |
Jim,
Simon, Blair, Joel, and Megan are all friends. |
Friend's |
Possessive |
As he
waited for Blair finish buttoning his shirt, Jim held his friend's coat. |
Babies |
Plural |
Jim
covered his ears, trying to block out the painful sound of the ten squalling babies in the
room. |
Baby's |
Possessive |
Jim
checked to see if the baby's bottle was warm enough, splashing a few drops of milk on his
wrist |
Brothers |
Plural |
The
brothers, Jim and Steven, hadn't seen each other in years. |
Brothers' |
Plural
Possessive |
They
pulled into the brothers' driveway, and Blair glanced nervously at Jim as the four men
came out of the house to greet them. |
Bought,
Brought -- I know this is a killer. It's so easy
to miss that 'r' after the 'b'.
Bought |
To
purchase, past tense. |
Blair
bought an ancient book on Zulu tribal customs. |
Brought |
To bring,
past tense. |
Blair
brought his new book home, curling up on the sofa to read. |
Breath,
Breathe
Breath |
The air
that moves in and out of your lungs. The word breath is pronounced with a soft, short 'e'
sound, as in 'let'. |
Jim
wrinkled his nose; the old man's breath was sour with disease. |
Breathe |
The act
of expanding and contracting your diaphragm and ribs, causing air to move in and out of
your lungs. The first 'e' in the word breathe is pronounced with a long 'e' sound, as in
'flee', the second 'e' is silent. |
Blair
tensed, willing Simon to breathe despite his severe injuries. |
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C
C C C C C C
Calvary, Cavalry -- These
words are tough; they aren't pronounced alike, but that 'l' just seems to float around on
its own whenever I try to spell it. <g>
Calvary |
In the
Christian Religion; a sculptured representation of the Crucifixion of Christ, usually
erected in the open air. |
"Wow!"
Blair exclaimed. "'Wow'
what, Chief?" Jim asked.
"I've never seen a Calvary sculpted
entirely out of ice," he explained, pointing. |
Cavalry |
Mobile
ground troops, organized in mounted, mechanized, or motorized units. One of the principal
arms or branches of the U.S. Army combat troops. Riders, horsemen, etcetera, collectively. |
Jim
cocked his head and squeezed Blair's arm reassuringly; he could hear the sirens of the
cavalry coming to their rescue. |
Can,
May -- It is amazing how often these two words
are confused. I know they're used interchangeably in very casual writing, such as letters
or notes, but they should not be interchanged otherwise.
Can |
To be
able to. To know how to. To have the right to. A vessel for holding or carrying liquids.
Slang for jail, toilet, buttocks, to dismiss or fire. Slang: means the same a may. |
"Yes,
I can," Blair said. "No
you can't," Jim replied.
"Can so."
"Can not."
"Can!" Blair leaped for the rope
hanging over the river.
"Told you!" Jim crowed, laughing as
Blair hit the water, belly first. |
May |
Permission.
Desire or wish. Contingency. Possibility. |
"Ah."
Simon wagged his finger. "What do you say?" "May I please go with Jim and Blair to the Jags
game?" Darryl sighed, looking put upon. |
Can't, Cant -- These words are not
interchangeable. Yeah, I know it's very easy to lose an apostrophe, but if it's something
you do frequently, a universal check through your story will find most of the problems.
Can't |
Contraction
for Can not. |
Blair
can't go to the bookstore right now because it's raining. |
Cant |
To lean,
to tilt. |
By the
cant of the sail, Simon knew the catamaran was leaning into the wind. The board lay canted against the dock like a sailor on
Saturday night, tripping Simon as he tried to get past it in the dark. |
Cause,
'Cause
Cause |
The power
or agent producing any thing or event. Any occasion or condition upon the occurrence of
which an event takes place. Any rational ground for choice or action. A great enterprise,
movement, principle, or aim. To produce, effect, induce, compel. |
Jim
slowed the truck to a crawl when he saw flashing lights ahead of them on the highway. "What happened?" he asked a patrolman.
"There's an eighteen car pile-up
ahead." The trooper leaned against the truck frame. "We're rerouting
traffic."
"Wow!" Blair exclaimed. "What
caused it?"
"Semi jack-knifed," he answered,
waving toward the off-ramp. |
'Cause |
Short
form of 'because'. Generally considered slang. It should only be used in dialogue.
Remember to put in the apostrophe. Because:
for the reason that; on account of the fact that; since. |
Giving
his partner a look, Blair kneeled next to the child. "Why did you run away,
Kyle?" he asked gently, holding the youngster by the arms. "'Cause." The seven year old mumbled, hanging
his head.
"'Cause, why?" Blair urged, squeezing
his shoulders.
"'Cause Mommy loves the new baby better'n
me," he wailed, crying into Blair's chest. |
Complement,
Compliment -- These two words are tough; there's
only one letter different between them.
Complement |
That
which fills up or completes. |
Jim and
Blair, Sentinel and Guide: perfect complements. |
Compliment |
An
expression of admiration or praise. |
"Good
job." Simon clapped Blair on the back, grinning when Blair's face reddened at the
compliment. |
Core,
Corps, Corpse -- This is an interesting trio:
core and corps are pronounced the same, and corps and corpse are spelled the same, except
for one letter.
Core |
The
central or innermost part of a thing. The heart of something. The most important part. |
Frowning
at Sandburg's incessant use of ten dollar words, Jim put one hand over his mouth.
"Cut through the bullshit," he growled, "and get to the core of the
problem, Darwin." |
Corps |
A
tactical unit, intermediate between a division and an army, and consisting of two or more
divisions. A special department or subdivision. |
"My
God," the hooker gasped, staring at Jim. "What'd he do, escape from the Marine
Corps?" "Nope."
Blair glanced up. "The Army Rangers." |
Corpse |
A dead
body, usually of a human being. |
Jim
caught Blair by the arm. "You don't want to look, Chief," he choked. "The
corpse has been there at least a week." |
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D
D D D D D
Defiantly, Definitely --
This is one of my own bug-a-boos; I constantly substitute one for the other. I know how to
spell both of them, I know what they mean, but my fingers have other ideas.
Defiantly |
Showing
or characterized by defiance. |
"You
can never be me!" Blair cried defiantly. "Only I can be me!" Lash merely mocked him, sunk in his own dementia. |
Definitely |
Having
precise limits; known with exactness; determined; clear; precise. Limiting;
particularizing. |
"Oh
boy." Blair caressed the dent in the fender of Jim's truck. "I'm definitely in
trouble now." |
Defuse,
Diffuse
Defuse |
To
disarm, as in a bomb. |
Sweat
pouring down his face and from his armpits, Joel methodically defused the timing mechanism
on the bomb. |
Diffuse |
To spread
in all directions. To circulate. To permeate. |
Jim was
livid when he found out the thieves had used the town's water supply to diffuse the toxin
that had made most of the inhabitants, including Blair, deathly ill. |
Desert, Dessert -- It's so
easy to add or delete an 's' from either of these words, plus they may or may not be
pronounced exactly alike.
Desert |
A region
so lacking in rainfall, moisture, and vegetation as to be uninhabitable by any
considerable population. Barren; waste. To deserve award or punishment. To forsake or
abandon with or without right. To abandon one's post, duty, etcetera. |
"Actually,"
Blair examined the murder weapon. "This type of knife was only used in special,
sacrificial ceremonies by a few of the desert tribes in what would eventually become
Egypt." Jim and Simon rolled
their eyes at each other and grinned: their very own anthropologist was off and running
again in his own little world. |
Dessert |
A service
of something sweet at the close of lunch or dinner. |
"You
call that dessert, Chief?" Jim sneered at Blair's fruit cup while digging in to his
own triple layer chocolate cake. |
Do, Due, Dew
Do |
To
perform an action. To complete. To deal with. To exert. |
"Just
do it, man," Blair whispered, one hand reassuringly pressed on Jim's back. |
Due |
Something
owed. Suitable. Sufficient. Appointed or expected to arrive. |
"When's
your mom's plane due, Chief?" Jim asked, never looking up from his paper. "At three," Blair replied, pacing nervously. |
Dew |
Moisture
condensed from the atmosphere upon cool surfaces. Anything moist, gentle, or refreshing. |
Waking at
dawn, Blair sat up in his sleeping bag, shaking the dew from his hair. |
Don't, Dont -- These are not the same word.
Don't |
Contraction
for do not. |
"Don't
open that door!" Jim lunged forward. |
Dont |
This
isn't even a word. |
It's not
even short for donut. Don't use it. |
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E
E E E E E
Either/Neither,
Or/Nor -- The rule of usage is: either, or /
neither, nor.
Either,
Or |
One or
the other. |
"Well,"
Jim said. "You can either have peppermint ice cream, or spinach, but not both." |
Neither,
Nor |
Not one
nor the other. |
Blair
stuck his tongue out in distaste. "Neither peppermint ice cream, nor spinach sounds
appetizing, Jim. I'd rather have liver and onions." |
Eminent,
Imminent
Eminent |
High in
merit or esteem. Distinguished. |
Simon
Banks was always held in eminent regard by his staff. |
Imminent |
About to
happen. Impending; usually about a disaster or evil. |
Jim was
so hyper his skin itched as he looked around wildly for the source of the imminent danger. |
Enthused, Enthusiastic(ally) -- The word 'enthused' is constantly used as an adjective, use 'enthusiastic'
instead. Yes, this is one of my pet peeves. I cringe every time I see the word 'enthused'
misused.
Enthused |
This word
is an intransitive and a transitive verb. It is not an adjective. To make enthusiastic; yield to or display enthusiasm.
Enthusiasm -- Earnest and fervent feeling;
ardent zeal for a person or cause. An object of great interest to a person. |
Blair was
so completely enthused about the results of his most recent tests with Jim, that he fell
off his chair.
Do not write the following:
"Hey Jim," Blair enthused. "I've got tickets to the Jags game!" |
Enthusiastic(ally) |
This word
is an adjective, or an adverb. Given
to enthusiasm; ardent; zealous. |
Write
this instead:
"Hey Jim," Blair cried enthusiastically. "I've got tickets to the Jags
game!" |
Everyone,
Every one
Everyone |
All the
people present, as a group. |
Teeth
flashing expansively, Blair smiled happily at everyone in the room. |
Every one |
All the
people in a group, individually. |
Attention
zeroing in on his five friends, Blair smiled at every one in turn. |
Exterior,
Interior
Exterior |
External;
outlying. Manifest to the senses. Acting from without. That which is outside; external
features or qualities. |
Simon
surveyed the exterior of the warehouse. "All right," he said. "You can go
in, but be careful." |
Interior |
Existing,
pertaining to, or occurring within something or between limits; internal; inner; opposed
to exterior. Inland. Of a private or confidential nature. Of or pertaining to spiritual
matters; not worldly. |
The
interior of the warehouse was so dark that Blair had to hang on to Jim's belt to keep from
tripping. |
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F
F F F F F
Farther,
Further -- This one's a toughie because they
both mean distance. It's the kind of distance that makes them different. Well, it's how I
was taught to differentiate between them. <g>
Farther |
Physical
distance. |
Locked in
the trunk of the speeding car, Blair's fear grew as he felt himself moving farther and
farther away from rescue. |
Further |
Mental
distance. |
Jim felt
he was further away from the answers to Blair's disappearance than ever before. |
Floor,
Ground -- pet peeve time again. If you're inside
a building and fall down, you land on the floor, not the ground.
Floor |
The
surface in a room or building upon which one walks. A story of a building. |
"Ahhh!"
Blair tumbled from the ladder, landing, paint can and all, messily on the floor. |
Ground |
The firm,
solid portion of the earth at and near its surface. Soil. Any tract of land. The dirt
outside. |
Jim
leaped from the rocky outcrop to land in a neat tuck and roll on the ground, half a story
below. |
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G
G G G G G
God,
god
God |
In
the Christian Religion: The one Supreme Being, self-existent and eternal; the infinite
creator, sustainer, and ruler of the universe; conceived of a omniscient, good, and
almighty. How the supreme being that has no name is called. A noun. |
"I
don't know what do, Rabbi," Blair said sadly. "Everything happened so fast, and
now I've hurt my best friend; practically destroyed him."
"Look to your heart, my son.
The answer will be there. God would not forsake you." He patted Blair's shoulder
reassuringly. |
god |
A being
regarded as possessing superhuman or supernatural qualities or powers and made an object
of worship or propitiation. A higher intelligence supposed to control the forces of good
and evil. Any person or thing exalted as the chief good, or made and object of supreme
devotion. Anything that absorbs one's attentions or aspirations. An image or symbol of a
deity. |
"No,
no, no, Jim." Blair shook his head. "Woden, rather Odin, was the head of the
Norse gods. Zeus was the head Greek god. |
Good,
Well
Good |
Satisfactory
in quality or kind. Striking in appearance. Virtuous. Worthy. Kind. Well-behaved. Proper.
Pleasing. Beneficial. Favorable. Skilful. Orthodox. Reliable. Considerable. Full. |
"Is
it good?" Blair asked, anxiously bouncing in his seat.
Jim chewed thoughtfully for a
minute. "Yeah," he said. "I like it." |
Well |
Shaft
sunk into the ground to obtain fluid. A spring of water. Satisfactorily. Properly.
Excellently. Suitably. Agreeably or luxuriously. Intimately. To a large or proper extent
or degree. Completely; wholly. Far; at some distance. Also. In addition to. Fortunate.
Having physical health. |
"How
ya doin', sir?" Jim asked, setting a bag of grapes on the hospital table. "Well, outside of a few extra holes here and there,
I'm all right," Simon said. |
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H
H H H H H
Heart,
Hart
Heart |
Central
organ of the cardiovascular system. The traditional seat of affections and emotions. |
Jim
lost his heart to Carolyn, but she merely ripped it to shreds and handed it back to him. |
Hart |
A
male red deer. |
Blair
felt as a hart must as he dodged yet another crazed killer. |
Here, Hear
Here |
This
place. |
"We're
here today in the loft apartment of that famous crime fighting duo: Jim Ellison and Blair
Sandburg." |
Hear |
To use
the auditory sense.
Slang: to understand. To accept what someone
else is saying without judgment. |
Jim's
extra sensitive ears allowed him to hear Blair's frantic scream for help, even from over a
mile away.
"I hear you," Naomi said, nodding
absently. |
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I
I I I I I
Its, It's
Its |
Possessive.
Belonging to. |
The Volvo
came into its own in 1969. |
It's |
Contraction
for 'it is' or 'it has' |
It's a
beautiful morning, even though it's been raining for the past three days. |
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K
K K K K K
Know, No
/ Knew, New
Know |
To have
knowledge of. To understand something. |
"Jim,
I just know you want to go to Wonder Burger for lunch." Blair grinned. |
No |
Negative.
Not yes |
"No,
chief, actually there's this great Chinese place out by Glenbrook Mall I'd like to
try," Jim said. |
Knew |
To have
knowledge of. Past tense of 'know'. |
Jim
smiled: he knew he had Blair's full attention. |
New |
Something
that is not old. Something made in the immediate past. |
"I
don't remember a Chinese place out that way. Is it new?" Blair asked. |
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