TV changes how you use language. When to use (and not use) 'more' and 'most'

TV changes how you use language. When to use (and not use) 'more' and 'most'

930. How YOU doin? Today we’re going to MacGyver up some fun memories and tips. And then we'll look at the rules about using "more" and "most" or "-er" and "-est." It'll be a yowlie howlie good time!

| Transcript: https://grammar-girl.simplecast.com/episodes/tv-language/transcript

| The "TV language" segment was written by Susan K. Herman, a retired U.S. Government multidisciplined language analyst, analytic editor, and language instructor.

| The "more or most" segment was written by Bonnie Mills who has been a copy editor since 1996.

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| HOST: Mignon Fogarty

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| Grammar Girl is part of the Quick and Dirty Tips podcast network.

  • Audio engineer: Nathan Semes
  • Editor: Adam Cecil
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| Theme music by Catherine Rannus.

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Episoder(1011)

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Why Brits eat biscuits and Americans eat cookies. Why brands keep nouning everything. Hamster alert.

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This week, in honor of National Cookie Day, we look at the vocabulary split between British and American English, including the differences between a cookie and a biscuit, and the two meanings of "pud...

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Rob Drummond on languaging and our fluid speaking identities

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25 Nov 202514min

Why print dictionaries still matter, with Peter Sokolowski

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20 Nov 202535min

Personification in language and AI. Dictums, maxims, and proverbs. Expensitive.

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1134. This week, we look at the poetic power of personification (the language quirk that gives human traits to nonhuman things) and why style guides advise against using it for AI. Then, we look at th...

18 Nov 202517min

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