Seven-Year-Old Me Gets Schooled in Regency Romance (and Carriages)

Ah, the perils of being a precocious child. At the tender age of seven, armed with what I clearly believed was an air of intellectual maturity (or maybe just a growth spurt?), I tackled Jane Austen’s Emma. Let’s just say it wasn’t exactly a happily ever after. The helpful librarian, …

Mind your…

Almost everybody knows that it is wrong to use apostrophes before an ‘s’ which denotes a plural rather than a possessive. So it is “breakfasts” and “tomatoes”, not “breakfast’s” (which I saw on a sign yesterday) or “tomato’s”. But what about plurals of words made up of initial letters, like …

Distressed…

The word “distressed” might seem straightforward, but a closer look reveals a rich and surprising history. Financial applications of “distressed” are particularly relevant today. We often hear about “distressed companies” and “distressed assets” during economic downturns. Interestingly, these terms were used as early as the 19th century! An 1866 Times …

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