grammarguide.copydesk.orgACES The Society for Editing - Grammar Guide

grammarguide.copydesk.org Profile

grammarguide.copydesk.org

Maindomain:copydesk.org

Title:ACES The Society for Editing - Grammar Guide

Description:I have a new Grammar Guide quiz for you to tryThis one uses images of online tweets and posts If you try the quiz be sure to click on the images to enlarge or to use a word from The Simpsons to

Discover grammarguide.copydesk.org website stats, rating, details and status online.Use our online tools to find owner and admin contact info. Find out where is server located.Read and write reviews or vote to improve it ranking. Check alliedvsaxis duplicates with related css, domain relations, most used words, social networks references. Go to regular site

grammarguide.copydesk.org Information

Website / Domain: grammarguide.copydesk.org
HomePage size:40.508 KB
Page Load Time:0.90641 Seconds
Website IP Address: 208.113.222.18
Isp Server: New Dream Network LLC

grammarguide.copydesk.org Ip Information

Ip Country: United States
City Name: Brea
Latitude: 33.930221557617
Longitude: -117.88842010498

grammarguide.copydesk.org Keywords accounting

Keyword Count

grammarguide.copydesk.org Httpheader

Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2020 05:54:21 GMT
Server: Apache
Link: http://grammarguide.copydesk.org/wp-json/; rel="https://api.w.org/"
Upgrade: h2
Connection: Upgrade, Keep-Alive
Vary: Accept-Encoding
Content-Encoding: gzip
Keep-Alive: timeout=2, max=100
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8

grammarguide.copydesk.org Meta Info

charset="utf-8"/
content="IE=edge,chrome=1" http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible"/
content="True" name="HandheldFriendly"/
content="320" name="MobileOptimized"/
content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" name="viewport"
content="#f01d4f" name="msapplication-TileColor"/
content="http://grammarguide.copydesk.org/wp-content/themes/aces_bones/library/images/win8-tile-icon.png" name="msapplication-TileImage"/

208.113.222.18 Domains

Domain WebSite Title

grammarguide.copydesk.org Similar Website

Domain WebSite Title
copydesk.orgACES: The Society for Editing
grammarguide.copydesk.orgACES The Society for Editing - Grammar Guide
aces.orgArea Cooperative Educational Services (ACES) - ACES
education.mods.army.milIMCOM ACES - ACES Home
event.cyberlink.com#1 Video Editing & Photo Editing Software + Media Player | CyberLink
membership.cyberlink.com#1 Video Editing & Photo Editing Software + Media Player | CyberLink
legacy.cyberlink.com#1 Video Editing & Photo Editing Software + Media Player | CyberLink
cyberlink.com#1 Video Editing & Photo Editing Software + Media Player | CyberLink
aces.bridgeblogging.comAces on Bridge
hitechcreations.comWelcome to Aces High
lonsdaleaces.teams.mnbaseball.orgLonsdale Aces | Home | scoremonster.com
autoacesonline.comAuto Aces - Home Facebook
portal.paorganic.orgPennsylvania Certified Organic Aces
note.mycil.orgACES$ Online - Site Login
aces.la-archdiocese.orgADLA ACES Account Administration

grammarguide.copydesk.org Traffic Sources Chart

grammarguide.copydesk.org Alexa Rank History Chart

grammarguide.copydesk.org aleax

grammarguide.copydesk.org Html To Plain Text

-- Grammar Guide Home About Pam Nelson Grammar Quizzes ACES Blog -- ACES Home About Pam Nelson Grammar Quizzes ACES Home About Pam Nelson Grammar Quizzes -- Grammar Guide quiz returns By Pam Nelson | 5:03 p.m. Jan. 8, 2017 | 6 comments A new quiz ( No. 78 ) is up. The questions include a hodgepodge of usage issues, and I’ve experimented with question formats. Give it a try . Please leave feedback if you are inclined. A new quiz lies waiting for you By Pam Nelson | 4:46 p.m. Oct. 25, 2015 | Comments Off on A new quiz lies waiting for you I have a new Grammar Guide quiz ( No. 77 ). This one is all about the tricky verbs lay and lie . An image from a TV news website shared on social media prompted me to finish a quiz that I had started some weeks ago. The nonstandard use of “laid” and “lays” in this image distracted me from the heartbreaking story that was being promoted. I shared it on Instagram. I think it's time for a quiz on lay and lie. #grammar A photo posted by @pnelson1954 on Oct 24, 2015 at 4:29am PDT Give Grammar Guide Quiz No. 77 a try. Edit: A reader told me of a typo in my first question (as of 1:30 p.m. ET Monday, Oct. 26). I am not able to fix that right away (doing my day job and don’t have access), but I will correct it when I can. Thanks to readers who help me find and fix typos! Second edit: The typo in the first question has been fixed! (as of 7 p.m. ET Monday, Oct. 26) Language debate and sensible advice By Pam Nelson | 11:34 a.m. March 24, 2015 | Comments Off on Language debate and sensible advice Anne Curzan at Lingua Franca has a spot-on blog post about the descriptive-prescriptive debate. Her post is pegged to a Wall Street Journal essay headlined “There Is No ‘Proper’ English.” Curzan, an English professor and a linguist, explains that the usage beliefs that some label “superstitions” could be called “conventions.” She writes about the value of conventional, standard English. As a copy editor, I hew to those conventions but avoid the discredited “rules.” For example, I would never edit a sentence to avoid a so-called split infinitive, and I know that writers are perfectly free to begin sentences with “and” or “but.” I do, however, edit to avoid an unintentional double negative or a dangling modifier. My goal is not to blindly obey rules, but to make published writing clearer and more readable. I am also trying to avoid distracting a reader from the writer’s point. A double negative in informational pieces, such as the ones I edit for a living, would be a distraction. If thoughtful copy editors ever need an expert opinion to support their efforts to improve writing, they could turn to Professor Curzan’s essay. By the way, Lingua Franca is worth checking regularly for language and writing advice. I wrote earlier about the tone of the descriptive-prescriptive debate, too. Just a little guidance: 10 years of blogging about grammar, usage, and copy editing By Pam Nelson | 1:05 p.m. March 22, 2015 | Comments Off on Just a little guidance: 10 years of blogging about grammar, usage, and copy editing “But I’m just a soul whose intentions are good. Oh, lord, please don’t let me be misunderstood.” —Nina Simone* Facebook friends sometimes share with me memes that refer to “Grammar Police” or “Grammar Nazis.” I never take offense at such posts. But the truth is that I hope I don’t come off as anything that could be construed as a Nazi (let’s use that term only for actual Nazis) or even as a police officer. The tone on both sides of the prescriptive-descriptive debate bothers me quite a bit. Even if some folks cling to “rules” that are myths (split infinitives, sentences ending in prepositions), we needn’t be nasty or dismissive (even if we think the beliefs those people hold are baseless peeves). I say we practice the Precious Metal Rule of Facebook in all casual matters: When someone posts a silly meme that you think is vacuous and possibly even erroneous, just scroll on past (or hide it if it really gets under your skin) and don’t respond unless you’re asked directly to express an opinion. If you do respond in writing, be respectful of the people, even as you rebut their views. And those who hold those beliefs instilled long ago in a classroom or on a copy desk should take the opportunity to question whether a reasoned argument based on linguistic evidence might be valid. Don’t be rude, and don’t be priggish. We would all do well to remember that language changes and standards evolve. I learn a great deal from reading what linguists and lexicographers write about English. Read the rest of this entry » Tweets and teases need a second look (new Grammar Guide quiz) By Pam Nelson | 3:42 p.m. Feb. 16, 2015 | Comments Off on Tweets and teases need a second look (new Grammar Guide quiz) I have a new Grammar Guide quiz ( No. 76 ) for you to try. This one uses images of online tweets and posts. If you try the quiz, be sure to click on the images to enlarge (or, to use a word from The Simpsons , to embiggen) them. This quiz uses mostly fill-in-the-blank questions, and I hope I have anticipated different versions of the correct answers in spots. Click here to begin the quiz. As always, I welcome your comments and questions, either in the comments section for this post or by email . « Older Entries Pam Nelson has been a copy editor for more than three decades. She has been a member of ACES since the organization began. This blog is a continuation of a blog on grammar, usage and other language issues that she began writing in 2005 at The News & Observer in Raleigh. Read more... >> E-mail | Twitter | Facebook Latest Tweets Follow @grammarguide Pam Nelson @grammarguide George Conway: Deeply saddened by the Republican Party - CNN Video https://t.co/kxvZmFNNKH about 2 days ago The sight of this thing makes me actually sick to my stomach. My country. It hurts. https://t.co/gVYmywah8v about 3 days ago Categories ACES conference Careers in copy editing Cool Words Copy Editing Dialect Fact checking Freelance editing Grammar due to-because of indefinite pronoun irregular verbs lay-lie misplaced modifiers pronouns and antecedents subject-verb agreement Grammar Guides, Quizzes Grammar Quiz Headlines Idioms Journalism Linguistics Mechanics Newspapers Old Triangle Grammar Guide Proofreading Punctuation hyphen Spelling double-take words Style Stylebooks Taste and Standards Uncategorized Usage confused words word choice Vocabulary American Copy Editors Society | info@copydesk.org | 7 Avenida Vista Grande, Suite B7 # 467, Santa Fe, NM 87508 ©2013 copyright 1997-2011 ACES; all rights reserved. The American Copy Editors Society is a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation....

grammarguide.copydesk.org Whois

"domain_name": [ "COPYDESK.ORG", "copydesk.org" ], "registrar": "Google LLC", "whois_server": "whois.google.com", "referral_url": null, "updated_date": "2020-03-17 04:51:41", "creation_date": "1997-06-13 04:00:00", "expiration_date": "2020-06-12 04:00:00", "name_servers": [ "NS-CLOUD-A1.GOOGLEDOMAINS.COM", "NS-CLOUD-A2.GOOGLEDOMAINS.COM", "NS-CLOUD-A3.GOOGLEDOMAINS.COM", "NS-CLOUD-A4.GOOGLEDOMAINS.COM" ], "status": [ "clientTransferProhibited https://icann.org/epp#clientTransferProhibited", "clientTransferProhibited https://www.icann.org/epp#clientTransferProhibited" ], "emails": [ "registrar-abuse@google.com", "5tp4c94x7w8m4qns8@proxyregistrant.email" ], "dnssec": "unsigned", "name": null, "org": "American Copy Editors Society, Inc.", "address": null, "city": null, "state": "IL", "zipcode": null, "country": "US"