75 Incorrectly Used Words That Can Make
You Look Dumb
How many of these do you get wrong?
Using
the right word can matter. Using the wrong word can matter even more. I once
lost a potential writing gig because I used "who" instead of
"whom" in a proposal letter.
(And
I still have trouble getting "who" and "whom" right.)
Even
just one incorrectly used word--especially when you're trying to make a great
impression--can ruin everything. Is that unfair? Yes... but it does happen.
To
make sure that doesn't happen to you, I've collected some of the most common
incorrectly used words from other posts into one epic post. (Thanks to all the
readers along the way who offered their own examples, many of which are
included here.)
Here
we go.
Adverse and averse
Adverse means harmful or unfavorable:
"Adverse market conditions caused the IPO to be poorly
subscribed." Averse refers to feelings of dislike or
opposition: "I was averse to paying $18 a share for a company that
generates no revenue."
But,
hey, feel free to have an aversion to adverse conditions.
Advise and advice
Aside from the two words being pronounced
differently (the s in advise sounds like az), advise is
a verb while advice is a noun. Advice is what you give
(whether or not the recipient is interested in that gift is a different issue
altogether) when you advise someone.
So
"Thank you for the advise" is incorrect, while "I advise you not
to bore me with your advice in the future" is correct if pretentious.
If
you run into trouble, just say each word out loud and you'll instantly know
which makes sense; there's no way you'd ever say "I advice you to..."
Affect and effect
Verbs first. Affect means to
influence: "Impatient investors affected our roll-out date."Effect means
to accomplish something: "The board effected a sweeping policy
change."
How you use effect or affect can
be tricky. For example, a board can affect changes by
influencing them and can effect changes by directly
implementing them. Bottom line, use effect if you're making it
happen, and affect if you're having an impact on something
that someone else is trying to make happen.
As for nouns, effect is
almost always correct: "Once he was fired he was given 20 minutes to
gather his personal effects." Affect refers to an
emotional state, so unless you're a psychologist you probably have little
reason to use it.
Aggressive and enthusiastic
Aggressive is a very popular business adjective:
aggressive sales force, aggressive revenue projections, aggressive product rollout.
But unfortunately, aggressive means ready to attack, or pursuing aims forcefully,
possibly unduly so.
So
do you really want an "aggressive" sales force?
Of course, most people have seen aggressive used that way for so long
they don't think of it negatively; to them it just means hard-charging,
results-oriented, driven, etc., none of which are bad things.
But some people may not see it that way. So
consider using words like enthusiastic,eager, committed, dedicated, or even (although it pains
me to say it) passionate.
Award and reward
An
award is a prize. Musicians win Grammy Awards. Car companies win J.D. Power
awards. Employees win Employee of the Month awards. Think of an award as the
result of a contest or competition.
A
reward is something given in return for effort, achievement, hard work, merit,
etc. A sales commission is a reward. A bonus is a reward. A free trip for
landing the highest number of new customers is a reward.
Be
happy when your employees win industry or civic awards, and reward them for the
hard work and sacrifices they make to help your business grow.
Between and among
Use between when you name separate and
individual items. Take "The team will decide between Mary, Marcia, and
Steve when we fill the open customer service position." Mary, Marcia, and
Steve are separate and distinct, so between is correct.
Use among when there are three or
more items but they are not named separately. Like, "The team will decide
among a number of candidates when we fill the open customer service position."
Who are the candidates? You haven't named them separately, so among is correct.
And we're assuming there are more than two
candidates; otherwise you'd saybetween. If there are two candidates you could say,
"I just can't decide between them."
Bring and take
Both have to do with objects you move or
carry. The difference is in the point of reference: You bring things here and you take them there. You ask people
to bringsomething to you, and you
ask people to take something to someone or somewhere else.
"Can
you bring an appetizer to John's party"? Nope.
Compliment and complement
Compliment means to say something nice. Complement means added to, enhanced,
improved, completed, or brought close to perfection.
I
can compliment your staff and their service, but if you have no current
openings you have a full complement of staff. Or your new app may complement
your website.
For
which I may decide to compliment you.
Continuously and continually
Both words come from the root continue, but they mean very
different things.Continuously means never ending.
Hopefully your efforts to develop your employees are continuous, because you
never want to stop improving their skills and their future.
Continual means whatever you're referring to stops and
starts. You might have frequent disagreements with your co-founder, but unless
those discussions never end (which is unlikely, even though it might feel
otherwise), then those disagreements are continual.
That's
why you should focus on continuous improvement but plan to have continual
meetings with your accountant: The former should never, ever stop, and the
other (mercifully) should.
Criterion and criteria
A criterion is a principle or standard.
If you have more than one criterion, those are referred to as criteria.
But if you want to be safe and you only have
one issue to consider, just say standardor rule or benchmark. Then use criteria for all the times there are
multiple specifications or multiple standards involved.
Discreet and discrete
Discreet means careful, cautious, showing good
judgment: "We made discreet inquiries to determine whether the founder was
interested in selling her company."
Discrete means individual, separate, or distinct:
"We analyzed data from a number of discrete market segments to determine
overall pricing levels." And if you get confused, remember: You don't use
"discretion" to work through sensitive issues; you exercise
discretion.
Elicit and illicit
Elicit means to draw out or coax. Think of elicit as the mildest form of
extract. If one lucky survey respondent will win a trip to the Bahamas, the
prize is designed to elicit responses.
Illicit means illegal or unlawful, and while I
suppose you could elicit a response at gunpoint, you probably shouldn't.
Everyday and every day
Every day means, yep, every day -- each and every day.
If you ate a bagel for breakfast each day this week, you had a bagel every day.
Everyday means commonplace or normal. Decide to wear
your "everyday shoes" and that means you've chosen to wear the shoes
you normally wear. That doesn't mean you have to wear them every single day; it
just means wearing them is a common occurrence.
Another example is along and a long: Along means moving in a constant
direction or a line, or in the company of others, while a long means of great distance or
duration. You wouldn't stand in "along line," but you might stand in
a long line for a long time, along with a number of other people.
A couple more examples: a while and awhile, and any way and anyway.
If you're in doubt, read what you write out
loud. It's unlikely you'll decide, "Is thereanyway (say it fast) you can help me?"
sounds right. "Is there any (small pause) way you can help me?" does.
Evoke and invoke
To evoke is to call to mind; an
unusual smell might evoke a long-lost memory. Toinvoke is to call upon something:
help, aid, or maybe a higher power.
So
hopefully all your branding and messaging efforts evoke specific emotions in
potential customers. But if they don't, you might consider invoking the gods of
commerce to aid you in your quest for profitability.
Or
something like that.
Farther and further
Farther involves a physical distance: "Florida
is farther from New York than Tennessee." Further involves a figurative
distance: "We can take our business plan no further."
So,
as we say in the South (and that "we" has included me), "I don't
trust you any farther than I can throw you," or "I ain't gonna trust
you no further."
Fewer and less
Use fewer when referring to items you
can count, like "fewer hours" or "fewer dollars."
Use
"less" when referring to items you can't (or haven't tried to) count,
like "less time" or "less money."
Good and well
Anyone who has children uses good more often than he or she
should. Since kids pretty quickly learn what good means, "You did good,
honey" is much more convenient and meaningful than "You did well,
honey."
But that doesn't mean good is the correct word choice.
Good is an adjective that describes something; if
you did a good job, then you do good work. Well is an adverb that describes
how something was done; you can do your job well.
Where
it gets tricky is when you describe, say, your health or emotional state.
"I don't feel well" is grammatically correct, even though many people
(including me) often say, "I don't feel too good." On the other hand,
"I don't feel good about how he treated me" is correct; no one says
"I don't feel well about how I'm treated."
Confused?
If you're praising an employee and referring to the outcome say, "You did
a good job." If you're referring to how the employee performed say,
"You did incredibly well."
And while you're at it, stop saying good to your kids and use great instead, because no one --
especially a kid -- ever receives too much praise.
If and whether
If and whether are often interchangeable.
If a yes/no condition is involved, then feel free to use either: "I wonder
whether Jim will finish the project on time?" or "I wonder if Jim
will finish the project on time?" (Whether sounds a little more formal in this case, so
consider your audience and how you wish to be perceived.)
It
gets trickier when a condition is not involved. "Let me know whether
Marcia needs a projector for the meeting" isn't conditional, because you
want to be informed either way. "Let me know if Marcia needs a projector
for the meeting" is conditional because you want to be told only if she
needs one.
And always use if when you introduce a
condition. "If you hit your monthly target, I'll increase your
bonus," is correct; the condition is hitting the target and the bonus is
the result. "Whether you are able to hit your monthly target is totally up
to you," does not introduce a condition (unless you want the employee to
infer that your thinly veiled threat is a condition of ongoing employment).
Impact and affect (and effect)
Many people (including, until recently, me)
use impact when they should use affect.Impact doesn't mean to influence; impact means to strike, collide,
or pack firmly.
Affect means
to influence: "Impatient investors affected our rollout date."
And to make it more confusing, effect means to accomplish
something: "The board effected a sweeping policy change."
How you correctly use effect or affect can be tricky. For example,
a board can affect changes by influencing them and can effect changes by
directly implementing them. Bottom line, use effect if you're making it happen,
and affect if you're having an impact
on something that someone else is trying to make happen.
As for nouns, effect is almost always correct:
"Employee morale has had a negative effect on productivity." Affect refers to an emotional
state, so unless you're a psychologist, you probably have little reason to use
it.
So stop saying you'll "impact
sales" or "impact the bottom line." Use affect.
(And
feel free to remind me when I screw that up, because I feel sure I'll
backslide.)
Imply and infer
The speaker or writer implies, which means to suggest. The
listener or reader infers,which
means to deduce, whether correctly or not.
So I might imply you're going to receive a
raise. And you might infer that a pay increase is imminent. (But not eminent, unless the raise will
somehow be prominent and distinguished.)
Insure and ensure
This one's easy. Insure refers to insurance. Ensure means to make sure.
So
if you promise an order will ship on time, ensure that it actually happens.
Unless, of course, you plan to arrange for compensation if the package is
damaged or lost -- then feel free to insure away.
(While there are exceptions where insure is used, the safe move is
to use ensure when you will do everything possible to make
sure something happens.)
Irregardless and regardless
Irregardless appears in some dictionaries because it's
widely used to mean "without regard to" or "without respect
to," which is also what regardless means.
In theory the ir-, which typically means "not,"
joined up with regardless, which means "without regard to," makes
irregardless mean "not without regard to," or more simply, "with
regard to."
So save yourself a syllable and just say regardless.
Mute and moot
Think of mute like the button on your
remote; it means unspoken or unable to speak. In the U.S., moot refers to something that is
of no practical importance; a moot point is one that could be hypothetical or
even (gasp!) academic. In British English, mootcan also mean debatable or open to debate.
So
if you were planning an IPO, but your sales have plummeted, the idea of going
public could be moot. And if you decide not to talk about it anymore, you will
have gone mute on the subject.
Number and amount
I goof these up all the time. Use number when you can count what you
refer to: "Thenumber of subscribers who opted
out increased last month." Amount refers to a quantity of something that can't
be counted: "The amount of alcohol consumed at our last company picnic was
staggering."
Of course it can still be confusing: "I
can't believe the number of beers I drank" is correct, but so is, "I
can't believe the amount of beer I drank." The difference is you can count
beers, but beer, especially if you were way too drunk to keep track, is an
uncountable total and makes amount the correct usage.
Peak and peek
A peak is the highest point;
climbers try to reach the peak of Mount Everest. Peekmeans quick glance, as in giving major
customers a sneak peek at a new product before it's officially unveiled, which
hopefully helps sales peak at an unimaginable height.
Occasionally a marketer will try to
"peak your interest" or "peek your interest," but in that
case the right word is pique, which means "to excite." (Pique can also mean "to upset,"
but hopefully that's not what marketers intend.)
Precede and proceed
Precede means to come before. Proceed means to begin or continue.
Where it gets confusing is when an -ing comes into play. "The proceeding
announcement was brought to you by..." sounds fine, but preceding is correct since the
announcement came before.
If it helps, think precedence: Anything that takes precedence is more
important and therefore comes first.
Principle and principal
A principle is a fundamental: "Our
culture is based on a set of shared principles."Principal means primary or of first
importance: "Our startup's principal is located in NYC." (Sometimes
you'll also see the plural, principals,
used to refer to executives or relatively co-equals at the top of a particular
food chain.)
Principal can also refer to the most important item in
a particular set: "Our principal account makes up 60 percent of our gross
revenues."
Principal can also refer to money, normally a sum that
was borrowed, but can be extended to refer to the amount you owe -- hence
principal and interest.
If you're referring to laws, rules,
guidelines, ethics, etc., use principle.
If you're referring to the CEO or the president (or an individual in charge of
a high school), useprincipal.
Slander and libel
Don't like what people say about you? Like slander, libel refers to making a false
statement that is harmful to a person's reputation.
The
difference lies in how that statement is expressed. Slanderous remarks are
spoken while libelous remarks are written and published (which means defamatory
tweets could be considered libelous, not slanderous).
Keep
in mind what makes a statement libelous or slanderous is its inaccuracy, not
its harshness. No matter how nasty a tweet, as long as it's factually correct
it cannot be libelous. Truth is an absolute defense to defamation; you might
wish a customer hadn't said something derogatory about your business, but if
what that customer said is true, then you have no legal recourse.
Stationary and stationery
You write on stationery. You get business stationery, such as
letterhead and envelopes, printed.
But that box of envelopes is not stationary unless it's not moving --
and even then it's still stationery.
Sympathy and empathy
Sympathy is acknowledging another person's feelings.
"I am sorry for your loss" means you understand the other person is
grieving and want to recognize that fact.
Empathy is having the ability to put yourself in the
other person's shoes and relate to how the person feels, at least in part
because you've experienced those feelings yourself.
The difference is huge. Sympathy is passive;
empathy is active. (Here's a short video by Bren Brown that does a great job of
describing the difference, and explains how empathy fuels connection while
sympathy drives disconnection.)
Know
the difference between sympathy and empathy, live the difference, and you'll
make a bigger difference in other people's lives.
Systemic and systematic
If you're in doubt, systematic is almost always the right
word to use. Systematicmeans
arranged or carried out according to a plan, method, or system. That's why you
can take a systematic approach to continuous improvement, or do a systematic
evaluation of customer revenue or a systematic assessment of market conditions.
Systemic means belonging to or affecting the system as
a whole. Poor morale could be systemic to your organization. Or bias against
employee diversity could be systemic.
So
if your organization is facing a pervasive problem, take a systematic approach
to dealing with it -- that's probably the only way you'll overcome it.
Then and than
Then refers in some way to time. "Let's close
this deal, and then we'll celebrate!" Since the celebration comes after the
sale, then is correct.
Then is also often used with if. Think in terms of if-then statements:
"If we don't get to the office on time, then we won't be able to close the
deal today."
Than involves a comparison. "Landing Customer
A will result in higher revenue than landing Customer B," or "Our
sales team is more committed to building customer relationships than the
competition is."
Ultimate and penultimate
I
once received a pitch from a PR professional that read, "(Acme Industries)
provides the penultimate value-added services for discerning
professionals."
Ultimate means the best, or final, or last. Penultimate means the last but one, or
second to last. (Or, as a Monty Python-inspired Michelangelo would say, "the Penultimate Supper!")
But penultimate doesn't mean second-best.
Plus, I don't think my PR friend meant to say her client offered second-class
services. (I think she just thought the word sounded cool.)
Also, keep in mind that using ultimate is fraught with hyperbolic
peril. Are you -- or is what you provide -- really the absolute best
imaginable? That's a tough standard to meet.
And
now for the dreaded apostrophes:
It's and its
It's is the contraction of it is. That means it's doesn't own anything. If
your dog is neutered (the way we make a dog, however much against his or her
will, gender neutral), you don't say, "It's collar is blue." You say,
"Its collar is blue."
Here's an easy test to apply. Whenever you
use an apostrophe, un-contract the word to see how it sounds. Turn it's into it is: "It's sunny" becomes "It is
sunny."
Sounds
good to me.
They're and their
Same with these: They're is the contraction for they are. Again, the apostrophe doesn't own anything.
We're going to their house, and I sure hope they're home.
Who's and whose
"Whose password hasn't been changed in six months?"
is correct. Use the non-contracted version of who's, like, "Who is (the non-contracted
version of who's)
password hasn't been changed in six months?" and you sound a little silly.
You're and your
One more. You're is the contraction of you are. Your means you own it; the
apostrophe in you're doesn't own anything.
A
local nonprofit in my area once displayed a huge sign that said, "You're
Community Place."
Hmm.
"You Are Community Place"? No, probably not.
BY JEFF HADEN
http://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/75-incorrectly-used-words-that-can-make-you-look-dumb.html?cid=em01014week41a
http://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/75-incorrectly-used-words-that-can-make-you-look-dumb.html?cid=em01014week41a
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