- aisle, isle, I'll
- aisle--walkway separating seats, as in 'You will find your seats on the left side of the right aisle.'
- isle---an island, as in 'Meet me on the Isle of Man.'
- I'll--contraction for I will, as in "I'll do that tomorrow."
- allowed, aloud
- allowed--similar to permitted, as in 'Smoking is not allowed here.'
- aloud---referring to the spoken word as opposed to the word kept in silent thought, as in 'Did I say that aloud?' This is more often replaced with 'out loud' these days.
- bight, Bight, bite, byte
- bight--the slack middle part of an extended rope
- Bight--a wide indentation of a shoreline, or the body of water bounded by such a curve, as in the place names Great Australian Bight or the Bight of Benin
- bite--a mouthful, as in 'that last bite of cantaloupe was sweet'
- bite--verb, to cut into with teeth, as in 'bite into it'
- byte--eight bits; unit of computer storage; also used with multiples, such as megabyte, kilobyte, terabyte.
- rain, reign, rein
- rain--liquid water precipitation, as in "I see the rain outside."
- reign--sovereign rule, as in "That was during the reign of Queen Victoria."
- rein--a horse's steering wheel, as in "Use the reins!"
- rapped, rapt, wrapped
- rapped--to knock sharply, as in "The UPS guy rapped on the door."
- rapt---spellbound, as in "He had our rapt attention."
- wrapped--encased in cloth or paper, as in "I'll be glad when all the presents are wrapped."
- right, rite, wright, Wright, write
- right--the opposite of left, as in 'Make a right turn here.'
- right--correct, as in 'checking the tires was the right choice'
- right--a legal fiction, such as 'the right of free speech'
- rite--a ritual, as in the burial rites of a particular culture
- wright--a maker, such as cart wright, wheel wright
- Wright--surname, as in Wilbur and Orville Wright
- write--to inscribe, to commemorate language, as in "I'll write a note on the stickie pad for you," or "I'll write a new blog entry on my site."
- road, rode, rowed
- road--street, as in 'keep your car on the road and you will get there'
- rode--past tense of ride, as in 'we rode toward the mountains for hours'
- rowed--past tense of row, as in 'we rowed upriver for two miles'
- there, their, they're
- there---introduces sentences, as in 'There are three people here.'
- there---location, as in 'Go over there.'
- their---possessive pronoun, as in 'Sam and Max finished their record.'
- they're--contraction for 'they are', as in 'They're doing well today.'
- to, too, two
- to--the preposition, as in 'give that to me'
- to--start of an infinitive, as in 'to be or not to be'
- too--rather like also, as in 'I would like a coffee with that, too'
- too--overly much, as in 'it is too loud in here'
- two--cardinal number, as in 'just the two of us'
- your, you're, yore
- yore--the past, as in 'days of yore'
- your--possessive pronoun for the second person, as in 'your car sounds like it has engine problems'
- you're--contraction for the clause 'you are', as in "you're right about that"
- --------------------------------------------
- One of my all time favorite sentences in English is "Grammar is the difference between knowing your shit and knowing you're shit." That difference is huge.
- bear, bare
- bear--noun: large mammalian quadruped. Yogi Bear. Brown bear, polar bear, grizzly bear.
- bare--adjective, unadorned: that's the bare truth.
- bear--verb, to withstand: they could not bear the stress.
- bare--adjective, naked: Having not watched the weather forecast, they went out with bare heads into the ice storm.
- Weak, week
- Weak, adjective: lacking strength or effectiveness. That was a weak response. His arm was weak after the break healed.
- Week, noun: seven days. A week had gone by. I will see you in a week.
- vein, vain
- vein, noun: one of the two types of blood vessels in mammals. Veins return blood to the heart and lungs to be re-charged with oxygen.
- vain, adjective: not yielding the desired result; a vain attempt
- vain, adjective: excessively proud. Conceited. A vain blowhard.
Words that have homophone siblings are frequently misused, often because the siblings have not been seen in correct contexts.
Saturday, August 17, 2013
20130817: Getting Started
Getting Started
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