Home -> Law Blog Directory -> Legal Writing Blogs -> Daily Writing Tips
(866) 635-2689 for Personal Injury or (866) 635-9402 for Criminal Defense
Find a Local Lawyer
Divorce (866) 635-6190
Personal Injury (866) 635-2689
Criminal Defense (866) 635-9402
Legal Writing
: Daily Writing TipsBook Review: ?Garner?s Modern American Usage?
By Mark Nichol
What is the state of writing today? Pick up any newspaper, magazine, or book, or look at a website, an email message, or a tweet, or examine a newsletter, a brochure, or a report. Want a more useful indicator of how particular words are used? Look them up in a new dictionary.
But these strategies will answer what may be the wrong question, because they provide a descriptivist view of the language — one that describes how writers are using the English language. But perhaps the perspective should be prescriptivist — one that prescribes how writers should use the English language.
An excellent prescriptivist resource for the careful writer — one who strives to produce high-quality prose — is Garner?s Modern American Usage. This nearly 1,000-page book by esteemed wordsmith Bryan A. Garner, first published in 2009 and already in its third edition, is the premier guide for what writers should aspire to.
The tome?s girth is imposing, but just like any other encyclopedic reference work, it is easily digestible. (Though word nerds may find themselves gorging on one entry after another instead of actually, you know, writing.) The entries range in length from curt cross-references and concise confirmations (?gimmickry. So spelled?not gimmickery?) to brief elucidations about words, parts of speech, and types of usage errors and (usually) short essays on topics ranging from ?Abbreviations? to ?Zeugma.?
These latter entries vary from discussion of parts of speech like adjectives and adverbs to entries on cliches, jargon, and other usage issues to matters of style such as italics and chronological dates.
A glossary of language terms almost fifty pages long — also beginning with an entry titled ?Abbreviations? and ending with one labeled ?Zeugma? — follows, along with a list of usage books going back 250 years and a bibliography of more than a hundred guides to grammar, usage, style, and more. Another feature of the book is the Language-Change Index, a five-stage system of charting the persistence or introduction of nonstandard language. In addition, erroneous usage is prominently signaled by asterisks.
Garner?s style is authoritative but not arrogant (and occasionally dryly humorous), and he backs his prescriptions up with rigorous scholarship, frequently citing published examples of misuse of one word for another — for example, of cue for queue.
Other usage guides may be more friendly and less formidable, but none matches Garner for thoroughness and clarity. If you have only one such resource at hand, make it this one.
Original Post: Book Review: ?Garner?s Modern American Usage?
Your eBook: Click here to download the Basic English Grammar ebook.
Full post as published by Daily Writing Tips on January 06, 2012 (boomark / email).
New Edition of Garners Modern American Usage
I noticed that a third edition of Garner’s Modern American Usage has been published. I’ll be purchasing a copy, as GMAU has been the first thing I turn to when looking for guidance on general English usage...
Have you proven your case
This is a rare occasion that I beg to differ with Bryan Garner. Does anyone detect a usage error in the headline? According to Garner?s Modern American Usage, proven as a past participle is ?ill-advised[ ]?: ?Proved?" has long been...
Garners Dictionary of Legal Usage (3d ed. 2011)
Oxford University Press recently released the third edition of Bryan A. Garner?s dictionary of legal usage. It?s predecessor, A Dictionary of Modern Legal Usage (2d ed. 1995) is 16 years old, so it was due for an update...
Book Review: Garner's Dictionary of Legal Usage 3rd Edition
Oxford University Press sent a review copy of Garner?s Dictionary of Legal Usage 3d Edition recently. I?ve been paging through this marvelous resource regularly, which is not something I would normally do with a dictionary...
More on proven as a proper American past participle
In a recent post, Have you proven your case?, I expressed rare disagreement with Bryan Garner about using proven as the past participle of prove. Garner?s Modern American Usage (3d ed...
New Edition of Garner's Modern American Usage
The third edition of Garner's Modern American Usage (Oxford UP, July 2009) including an interesting new feature, Garner's Language-Change Index, which registers where each disputed usage in modern English falls on a five-stage continuum from nonacceptability (to the language community...
AT&T Faces Class Action over Excessive Data Usage Charges
AT&T Faces Class Action over Excessive Data Usage Charges
Veolia Water
allegedly overestimated water usage for residential customers.
Google
Settles Book-Scanning Class Actions for $125 Million
Amazon
Facing Class Action over Book Deletions
Ram Publishing
alleging phone book advertising contract fraud.
FDA Issues Update on Safety Review Orlistat
Orlistat FDA Issues Update on Safety Review








