Grammar tips for better writing

Write right: Avoid these common grammar mistakes

Oh no! It’s a pop quiz!

1. If your pants are too big, are they lose or loose?

2. What is the difference between the Latin phrases i.e. and e.g.?

3. Is there an apostrophe missing in this sentence: “The Smiths live in the green house”?

To find out the answers to the pop quiz questions, go to the end of this document. If you’re not sure about your answers, you might want to read a little along the way.

In a world where e-mails and Web sites are often the first contact customers have with a company, the written word is becoming more and more important. To make a good first impression, a company must be sure that its Web site not only works right but reads right as well.

However, spelling and grammar rarely top the list of favorite subjects to read up on, so we’ve put together some help for the grammatically challenged. Read this list and make notes of the words that give you trouble. This should help to improve your writing and cut down on the opportunities your co-workers have to tease you about your mistakes.

If you’re really interested in words and how they are used and misused, here are a few more resources to peruse. Paul Brians, a professor of English at Washington State University, Pullman, WA, has put together a wonderful page of common writing errors. We used several of his examples in this download. If you’re wondering about how to use or spell a word that is not in our list, check out his site at

Professor Brians’ site also includes links to the following resources:

  • Jack Lynch's Grammar and Style Notes (
  • Charles Darling's Guide to Grammar and Writing (
  • Ronald B. Standler's Technical Writing Guide (
  • Garbl's Writing Resources OnLine (
  • Non-Sexist Language (
  • WWWebster Dictionary (Merriam Webster) (
  • Mindy McAdams' Spelling Test (

This document is provided for informational purposes only and TechRepublic makes no warranties, either expressed or implied, in this document. Information in this document is subject to change without notice. The entire risk of the use or the results of the use of this document remains with the user. The example companies, organizations, products, people and events depicted herein are fictitious. No association with any real company, organization, product, person or event is intended or should be inferred. Complying with all applicable copyright laws is the responsibility of the user. Without limiting the rights under copyright, no part of this document may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), or for any purpose, without the express written permission of TechRepublic.

The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.

Confused and misused

The following words and phrases are often used incorrectly. Included are several words that sound the same but have different meanings. These words are not interchangeable, and the following rules and examples will explain why. Also included are phrases that are often written incorrectly. Take note of these mistakes so that you don’t make them yourself.
A/An

Ronald B. Standler offers this rule on his Web page on Technical Writing:

Use a if the first letter of the following word begins with a consonant, “a horse, a dog, a Macintosh computer.”

Use an if the first letter of the following word begins with a vowel sound (a, e, i, o, u), “an owl, an ostrich, an IBM machine, an hour-long meeting.”

Accept/Except

Accept: to take or receive. “I’ll accept your apology.”

Except: to exclude or omit. “I want everyone to leave except my mother.”

English professor Paul Brians offers this advice on his Web site, which covers common writing errors:

“Just remember that the ‘X’ in except excludes things—they tend to stand out, be different. In contrast, just look at those two cozy ‘Cs’ snuggling up together.”

Adapt/Adopt

Adapt: to alter so as to fit. “Ryan adapted his brother’s jacket to fit his smaller frame by making the sleeves shorter.”

Adopt: To take by choice into a relationship. “The photographer adopted a child from China.”

Adverse/Averse

Adverse: hostile or opposed, difficult circumstances. “The ocean storm created adverse sailing conditions.”

Averse: having a strong feeling against. “I am averse to watching hockey.”

Advice/Advise

Advice: a noun, help. “Dear Abby gives advice.”

Advise: a verb, to offer counsel. “The joint chiefs of staff advise the president.

Affect/Effect

Affect: almost always used as a verb, to have an influence on. “The million-dollar donation from the industrialist did not affect my vote against the Clean Air Act.”

Effect: used as a noun, power to bring about a result. “When I left the faucet running, the effect was that the bathroom was flooded.” Usedas a verb, to create, “The duty of the legislature is to effect the will of the citizens.”

Conscience/Conscious

Conscience: a noun, the ability to tell right from wrong in one’s behavior. “I hope that crime weighs on her conscience.”

Conscious: an adjective, having an awareness of one’s existence, environment, or behavior. “I am conscious of the fact that I have made mistakes.”

Could care less

When you say this, you are actually saying that you do care somewhat about whatever you’re discussing. The correct phrase, “I could not care less,” means that you are at the end of your caring rope.

e.g. and i.e.

Both e.g. and i.e. are abbreviations for Latin phrases.

"Id est" (i.e.) means that is. “Stealing is illegal, i.e., dangerous.”

"Exempli gratia" (e.g.) means for example. “The menu is full of Italian dishes, e.g., pasta carbonera.” Place a comma both before and after either of these abbreviations.

Greater than/Greater then

It’s always “greater than.” “His desire for money is greater than his will to work.”

Me, Myself, and I

I is always a subject. “I broke the tie.” Or “I love biscotti.”

Myself is not a substitute for I and should never be used as the subject of a sentence. Don’t use, “Myselfbrokethetie.” Or “Myselflovebiscotti.”

Professor Brians has this to say about me, myself, and I:

“The notion that there is something wrong with "me" leads people to overcorrect and avoid it where it is perfectly appropriate. … Trying even harder to avoid the lowly me, many people will substitute myself, as in ‘The suspect uttered epithets at Officer O'Leary and myself.’

“Myself is not a sort of all-purpose intensive form of me or I. Use myself only when you have used I earlier in the same sentence: ‘I am not particularly fond of biscotti myself.’‘I kept half the loot for myself.’"

Lay/Lie

Lay: to put or set down. “I will lay the baby in her crib.”

Lie: to be in a reclining position. “I will lie down on the bed.”

Lay is something you do to something else; lie is what you do yourself.

Lose/Loose

Loose: not tight or confined. “She lets her dog run loose in the street.”

Lose: to be unable to find. "He tends to lose his keys."

Professor Brians suggests pronouncing the word aloud if you are don’t know which to use:

“If it has a voiced Z sound, then it's ‘lose.’ If it has a hissy S sound, then it's ‘loose.’”

-ly words

Adverbs (something that modifies a verb) that end in “-ly” are not hyphenated. "She is technically oriented." Or “He is moderately qualified.”

Moral/Morale

Moral: a lesson often found at the end of a story. “The moral of the story is: Don’t count your chickens before they hatch.”

Morale: the emotional state of a group. “Morale was high among the start-up’s staff because of a successful IPO.”

Passed/Past

Passed: a verb, moved on or ahead. “I passed the potatoes to Aunt Marie.”

Past: a noun, events that have already happened. “All those mistakes are in the past.”

Personal/personnel

Personal: relating to an individual, private. “Can I ask you a personal question?”

Personnel: a group of people employed by a business. “The policy change will affect all of Acme’s personnel.”

Site/Sight

**If you work on the Web, please get this one right.

Sight: the ability to see. “His sight was restored after years of blindness.”

Site: a place or location, such as a home page. “The site is temporarily down.”

Sole/Soul

Sole: the bottom of the foot. “I have a blister on the sole of my foot.”

Soul: the spiritual nature of humans, considered separate from the body. “I am worried about your eternal soul, my dear.”

To/Too

To: in a direction toward. “We are going to Paris.”

Too: in addition to. “You’ll need a passport and traveler’s checks too.”

Professor Brians has another handy way to tell the difference:

“Just remember that the only meanings of too are "also," "I want some ice cream too," and "in excess," "Your walkman is playing too loudly." Note that extra O. It should remind you that this word has to do with adding more on to something. To is the proper spelling for all the other uses.”

Possessive pronouns and contractions
Possessive pronouns and contractions are all too commonly confused. Often the mistake happens because of a simple typo or carelessness, while, other times, people forget which is which. Either way, you shouldn’t fall prey to the it/it’s monster.
Pronouns are substitutes for nouns. Possessive pronouns are substitutes for possessive nouns. Instead of using the alien’s in this sentence: “The alien’s green and black skin glistened in the moonlight,” you could use the possessive pronoun its. “Its green and black skin glistened in the moonlight.
Contractions are two words made into one with an apostrophe. The contraction of it is is it’s. Read the following examples to learn more about the difference between possessive pronouns and contractions.
Contractions

It’s

It’s is a contraction of it is. “It’s (it is) going to be a while before the server is live again.”

You’re

You’re is a contraction of you are. “You’re (you are) going to be in trouble when we get home.”

They’re

They're is a contraction of they are. “They’re (they are) going around the world in 80 days.”

Possessives

Its

Its is a possessive. “Its hair stood on end.”

Your

Your is a possessive. “Keep your hands to yourself.”

Their

Their is a possessive. “Their dog is so well behaved.”

How to tell the difference

Its/It’s

Here’s the test: If you can replace the word with it is and the sentence still makes sense, you want it’s. If the sentence doesn’t make sense, you want its. For example, "It’s (it is) hair stood on end." Nope. In that case you must use its.

Your/You’re

The same test works here: If you can substitute you are in a sentence and it still makes sense, you want you’re. If it doesn’t make sense, you want your. “Keep you’re (you are) hands to yourself.” Nope. Your is the correct choice.

Their/They’re

Do you see a pattern here? “They’re (they are) company is a leader in the industry.” Nope, that sentence needs the possessive form, their.

Apostrophes

The big question here is when to use apostrophes. Americans seem to be crazy for this punctuation mark, because it is everywhere—especially where it doesn’t belong.

Just because a word ends in an s, doesn’t mean that it automatically gets an apostrophe. “I like banana’s, orange’s, and apple’s” is incorrect.

However, “The banana’s skin is brown” is correct. In this case, banana gets an apostrophe because a noun follows it. It owns the noun, just like the banana owns its skin.

The confusing aspect of all this is that the possessives listed above (its and your) do not need apostrophes. But they are the exception to the rule; most other possessive words do need apostrophes. “The laptop is Betty’s.” “The laptop is hers.” “The calf cried for its mother.” “Samantha’s mother warmed a bottle.”

Finally, verbs NEVER need apostrophes, “The dog runs fast.” “The computer crashes frequently.”“The world turns on its axis.”

Common spelling mistakes

You can’t always rely on spell check, and often Web sites don’t seem to use it at all. But there’s nothing more unprofessional or embarrassing than sending out training materials, e-mails, or business reports with misspellings. There is no excuse. If you haven’t yet, it’s time to learn to spell.

To help you get started, here are a few of the most commonly misspelled words:

  1. A lot (This is always two words, never one.)
  2. Beginning
  3. Broccoli
  4. Business (Count the n’s and the s’s, and never misspell this at work again.)
  5. Congratulations (There is no “d” in this word.)
  6. Consensus
  7. Definitely
  8. Dependent (There is no “ant” at the end.)
  9. Embarrassment
  10. Environment
  11. Irritable (Not “irritible.”)
  12. Judgment
  13. Liaison
  14. Memento (Not “momento.”)
  15. Necessary
  16. Occurred
  17. Privilege (There’s no “d” here either.)
  18. Receive (This is an example of the “I before E except after C” rule.)
  19. Recommend
  20. Sense
  21. Separate (There is only one “e” in this word.)
  22. Truly
  23. Weird
  24. Whether
  25. Yield

Pop quiz answers

1. Loose is correct. Although you might lose your pants if they’re loose, you still won’t ever say they’re lose because they’re roomy.

2. Latin is a dead language, but it still creeps up often enough to keep us on our toes. I.e. means that is and e.g. means for example.

3. There is no apostrophe missing in this sentence. Of course, you could always rewrite it if you’re feeling particularly apostrophe-needy. (“The Smiths’ house is green.”)

1