Re: Misuse of 'quotes'

Subject: Re: Misuse of 'quotes'
From: Mary McWilliams Johnson <mary -at- SUPERCONNECT -dot- COM>
Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 22:33:56 -0500

There's probably no super-diplomatic way to let your marketing director know
that quotes are totally "unnecessary" and "wrong." You might ask him whom he
is quoting. Or you might tell him that putting something in quotes implies
that it's not really true - that it's a "pretend" truth - sort of
tongue-in-cheek.

I sympathize with your frustration. I get so tired of reading signs on
restaurants that boast of "home cookin'." !!!

Cordially,

------------------------------º><º------------------------------
Mary McWilliams Johnson
McJohnson Communications
Documentation Specialist
Web Site Design, Development and Graphics
www.superconnect.com
------------------------------º><º------------------------------


At 12:32 PM 6/4/98 +0959, Rev Simon Rumble wrote:
>Our Marketing Director has obviously been reading the output of too many
>signwriters. He seems to put quotes around "everything" in all his
>sentences.
>
>Does anyone have a diplomatic way of explaining to him why what he's doing
>is "wrong"? It's "really" annoying me :)
>
>PLUR
>
>---
> ___ simon -at- rumble -dot- waratah -dot- id -dot- au
>|___ http://www.rumble.net
> ___| H E R M "If the designers of X-windows built cars, there would
> be no fewer than five steering wheels hidden about the
> cockpit, none of which followed the same prinicples --
> but you'd be able to shift gears with your car stereo.
> Useful feature, that."
> -- From the programming notebooks of a heretic, 1990.
>
>
>
>




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