http://faerye.net/tag/spellingPosts tagged with "spelling" - Faerye Net2008-07-08T11:27:48+00:00Felicity Shouldershttp://faerye.net/http://faerye.net/post/grey-and-graygrey and gray2008-07-08T11:27:48+00:002008-07-08T11:27:48+00:00<p>In my third semester in the <span class="caps">MFA</span>, I got a marginal note from my advisor: “grey is Engl. spelling – gray is U.S. spelling”. On the next page, he circled ‘gray’ (pushing consistency), and by the end of that semester I had added “find/replace grey” to the list of final touches I must put on a story before sending it out.</p>
<p>I actually remember having trouble with this as a child. We largely learn to spell by reading, or at least I did, and massive numbers of the books I read as a child were British. I remember being admonished for writing ‘colour’ and ‘flavour’ as a first- or second-grader, and my indignation at the unfairness. It was in books! How could it be wrong if it was spelled that way <em>in books</em>? But some variations between British and American English are further under the radar than ‘glamour’ and ‘theatre’. Enforcement of ‘gray’ was not widespread, and I wasn’t sure which I should use. I remember misspelling my grandmother’s name as ‘Vey’ instead of ‘Vay’ – I don’t think my parents realized it, but that was because of ‘grey’.</p>
<p>Now that I realize the distinction, it’s interesting to see that, while I obviously prefer ‘grey’, I use both. Search finds 69 non-Grey City hits for ‘grey’, 31 non-name hits for ‘gray’ just on this site. Heck, I even spell Marvel Girl’s secret identity both ways. I’m hemorrhaging geek-cred while we speak. At any rate, I think I use the word ‘grey’ for more subtle or numinous hues and connotations, whereas I reach for the American ‘gray’ for flatter, darker tones. Zombies are gray. <a href="http://faerye.net/post/wordwatching" target="links">Skies over oceans</a> are grey. No wonder I’ve been using the latter extensively <a href="http://faerye.net/post/thesis-matters" target="links">in my thesis</a>. One wonders what other linguistic quirks I will discover in myself as I turn a disciplined eye to my writing!</p>http://faerye.net/post/petty-peevishness-vPetty Peevishness V2007-01-19T09:15:53+00:002009-01-28T16:38:49+00:00<p>I can’t believe this is even making it to my petty peeves, but I just can’t take it anymore.</p>
<p>Cars have brakes. <b>Brakes brakes brakes</b>. Metaphors generally have brakes too. ‘Put on the <b>brakes</b>’, not the ‘breaks’. Please, for my poor nerves.</p>
<p><em>sob</em></p>