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February 06, 2008

The Wednesday Word Wise Roundup

  • While we all occasionally fall into the trap of using business-speak and of-the-moment jargon, here's an excellent and hilarious article from Lucy Kellaway at the Financial Times that should make anyone who thinks their private bloviations are private think again. I feel sorry for the guy - he obviously never thought his memo, an internal document, would be made public.
  • If Hillary Clinton becomes president, how will the press refer to her – Mrs. Clinton? Ms. Clinton? The Wall Street Journal’s online Style & Substance column has an interesting bit about German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Apparently the paper had been referring to her as Ms. Merkel (when not referring to her as Chancellor Merkel) but at her request she will heretofore be known as Mrs. Merkel (oddly, Merkel is her first husband’s last name, not her current husband’s name, which is Sauer).

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Why "Word Wise"?

  • When I started to send out a weekly writing tip to my Chicago colleagues at Edelman (the world's largest privately owned PR firm), little did I know how quickly the list of those receiving it would grow. But word spread, as word is wont to do, and for the past three years about 1,500 of my 2,400 colleagues worldwide have been receiving it. The tips, which are about grammar, usage and style, have a dual purpose – to remind my colleagues in public relations of the power of the written word (I’m lucky to work for a company that not only prizes, but expects, expert communications skills), and, more generally, to support and perpetuate clear, concise, creative, honest, lively, stylish, compelling writing everywhere. With “Word Wise,” I hope you’ll challenge me, challenge other readers, make suggestions, argue minutiae, add commentary, exchange ideas, and help all of us become the best writers we can be.