Scott's : Hot Trends

9:11 PM

Hot trends for April 18, 2008

CON JOB: Covering Convention News (NYCC ‘08 Part One)

Fri, 18 Apr 2008 17:00:42 PDT
CON JOB: Covering Convention News (NYCC ‘08 Part One) Posted April 18th, 2008 by Corey Henson Categories: Con Job, Corey Henson, Comics DC announces ongoing Power Girl series FINALLY. Here’s a series I can get really excited about. I’m not much of a Power Girl fan, so the idea of a monthly series starring the character doesn’t really do a heck of a lot for me. But I have been waiting years for Amanda Connor to choose a regular, monthly assignment, so the subject really doesn’t matter to me.

GIS Used to Explore Safety of Refugee Camps

Fri, 18 Apr 2008 15:34:43 PDT
Simon Reich, Pitt professor of international affairs and director of the Ford Institute led the study to determine the factors that impact the security of populations in IDP and refugee camps. The plan is to use the information to create safer camps. Reich will present his recommendations, based on the results of the study, to the United Nations Office of Children and Armed Conflict May 1 in New York City. Here's the GIS bit: The study is one of the first initiatives to generate a database of

Former PM still plugs for Kelowna deal (Nunatsiaq News)

Thu, 17 Apr 2008 13:54:20 PDT
Paul Martin, the former prime minister, is finding surprising success in his one-man crusade to revive the defunct political commitment known as the Kelowna accord.

World News-World Infomation

Fri, 22 Jun 2007 10:11:04 PDT
World News-World Infomation-Business,News_Society,Home_Family,Food,Drink,Health,Fitness,Finance,Computers,Technology,Arts,Entertainment,Communications,Women's_Interests, lawyershttp://mba.mbapaper.com/http://www.easy-host.cn/

Certified Organic Makeup?!

Fri, 18 Apr 2008 06:11:17 PDT
Last year's organic sales in America hit $US24 billion, with organic personal care now an $8 billion industry… with expectations of surpassing $12 billion by 2011. Carrying the trend still further, can you guess which band has been dubbed ‘the world’s first mass-market certified organic make-up’...?

Real-Time Local News a Central PA Winner

Thu, 27 Sep 2007 00:00:01 PDT
Harrisburg, PA (PRWEB) September 27, 2007 -- There's a lot going on and nobody wants to miss it. Now Central Pennsylvania has a source for...

Former PM still plugs for Kelowna deal - Nunatsiaq News


Former PM still plugs for Kelowna deal
Nunatsiaq News, Canada - 22 hours ago
But in an interview on CBC Newsworld last week, Martin lambasted Stephen Harper's Conservative government for ignoring the health and education needs that ...


WordPress Upgrades

Thu, 27 Sep 2007 10:05:37 PDT
WordPress 2.3 and 2.2 upgrades include security and minor bugfixes without any plugin or theme compatibility issues. Do share your feedback if you upgrade.Download |WordPress | Instructions | Extended Upgrade GuideTag: Wordpress design, wordpress News,World News

Real-Time Local News Now Blankets Michigan

Tue, 02 Oct 2007 00:00:01 PDT
Ann Arbor, MI (PRWEB) October 2, 2007 -- There is always something happening in Michigan and once-a-day news can't cover it all. The days of waiting for traffic or weather reports or the latest...

OneNote 2007 Send-To 64-Bit Support? Not Coming

Fri, 18 Apr 2008 16:49:38 PDT
We received several inquiries from our readers to ask the Microsoft OneNote team about when 64-bit support would be coming for their Send-To printer in OneNote 2007. 64-bit support for the Send-To printer will not be coming until OneNote 14 releases to the public. There are no plans to address this with a patch or service pack. So, if you rely upon the Send-To feature in OneNote, I'd recommend sticking with or going back to 32-bit Vista. I guess Warner will be going back to 32 bit Vista

Evolving trends in Chandigarh Real Estate

Fri, 18 Apr 2008 00:11:08 PDT
The residential real estate projects that developers launched in Chandigarh outskirts, with a view to leverage the NRI base of the city, are undergoing difficult times.

Young & Adults - live chat support services

Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:15:12 PDT
This group has a wide age range, i.e. from 15 to 9 years, and is therefore representing a bigger chunk of the population, i.e. 19 %, with bigger slice of studying age group. There has been an increase in the trend of young people staying with their parents, for a longer period, as compared to the trend in the 90sto move out as soon as one could....

Photos of cast from the upcoming G.I. Joe movie!

Fri, 18 Apr 2008 15:53:06 PDT
For more news and reviews, check out http://moveitmoveit.wordpress.com.


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8:13 AM

Grammar Grate - Working Hard - Or Hardly Working

Gather.com , USA - Apr 11, 2008
 
Grammar Grater: Working Hard...Or Hardly Working?
 

"I feel bad."

"I feel badly."

Which is correct?

Today we discuss this common pitfall when writing or speaking, and we've brought in a special guest to help us understand it.

Catherine Winter is an editor for the American RadioWorks documentary unit at American Public Media. She also holds the distinct honor of having been called in to settle a heated debate in the Minnesota Public Radio newsroom over "I feel bad" versus "I feel badly."

"If you're going to use the phrase at all," Winter says, "I would suggest using 'I feel bad.'"

To understand the difference, Winter says one must revisit "those old friends" from grammar school, the adjective and the adverb. As a quick refresher, Winter explains that an adjective is a word that describes a noun. She gives the examples of

a blue house

a hopeless situation

the ugly stepsister.

"In those cases," Winter says, "you've got blue and hopeless and ugly and those are the adjectives."

Winter defines an adverb as a word that is used to describe a verb. She gives these examples:

the boy ran fast

she slept deeply

he spoke hopelessly

The words fast, deeply and hopelessly are the adverbs.

Winter points out that in the sentence, "I feel badly," the speaker is using the adverb badly to describe the verb feel. "It means you're saying that you lack sensory ability," Winter says, "like maybe if your hands were numb you might say, 'I feel badly.' But if you want to say that you are regretful or sad, then you need to say 'I feel bad.'"

Nevertheless, there are many people who think "I feel badly" is correct. Winter offers two possible explanations for this confusion.

First, she thinks many people got it drilled into them in grammar school that they must use an adverb after a verb. "In many instances that's correct," Winter explains, "but we have this set of verbs that some authorities would call linking verbs that tend to refer to perception. So you wouldn't say 'I feel badly' any more than you would say, 'This tastes bitterly.' You have these verbs of perception like seems or thinks or feels or looks or appears that take an adjective, not an adverb. I think a huge part of the confusion arises there."

The second source of confusion has to do with parallel structures. "The opposite of well is badly," Winter says. "If I do something well, I might do something badly. But well is also an adjective: you can feel well or you can say all is well, and the opposite of that is bad, not badly. So people tend to get confused."

According to Winter, a big reason people say "I feel badly" is because they're simply trying really hard to be right. "This is actually an example of a fascinating phenomenon called hypercorrection," she says. "It's where if somebody corrects you for an error in one circumstance, you then over-generalize and apply that correction where it doesn't actually belong."

Winter says we see this most often with pronouns: "People will say, 'He gave the pictures to Jenny and I' when it really ought to be 'Jenny and me.'"

Winter explains that at some point in that person's life, it's likely he or she said, "Jenny and me are going to the store." Someone else, likely a parent or a teacher, corrected that person, saying, "Jenny and I." This creates a false belief that whenever that circumstance arises, it's imperative to use I instead of me.

[Note: For more discussion about I versus me, listen to Grammar Grater Episode 6: I Gotta Be Me.]

"You see it in other circumstances, too," Winter says. "People will say 'seldomly' because they think all adverbs have to have -ly in them."

We asked Winter if saying "I feel badly" rather than "I feel bad" is a serious error.

"I think 'I feel badly' is arguably a more serious error than many things people call errors," Winter says. "There really is no circumstance in which that's the appropriate language to use."

She compares language choices to one's clothing choices, describing how sometimes it's appropriate to wear a t-shirt and at other times it's better to wear a tie. She extends this to speech by saying in some circumstances, it's all right to say "gonna" but and in others one ought to say "going to."

"But there is no circumstance in which it's all right to say 'I feel badly'," Winter says. "By analogy, that's sort of like not just neglecting to wear a tie-but wearing a tie on your foot."

Finally, we asked Winter if there was anything speakers and writers can do to avoid this error. "You are going to run into people who think you're wrong when you say 'I feel bad' even though I'm here to tell you you're not, you're right," she advises. "So it might be the best thing to just write around it and say, 'I regret that' or 'That made me unhappy' or 'I feel hopeless' or something like that and just avoid having anybody think you're wrong."

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