Saturday, August 30, 2025

Pet Peeve: English Grammar Mistakes #1

 


No doubt I'm a rare breed. I love grammar, and it really bothers me to hear and read grammatical mistakes. There was a time when newspapers and magazines had staff to check for mistakes and correct them. There was a time when people couldn't get jobs in the media, or teaching, without excellent grammar. Now not even teachers speak or write correctly, so how can they teach the next generation?

I'm not talking about the most complicated word usage or sentence structure. This time I'll start with something so basic and so easy to teach it's totally incomprehensible to me why the misusage has become some common, even acceptable. 

Let's start with the proper usage of the words "more" and "most" and suffixes "-er" and "-est."

Just a few years ago, when I was an EFL- English as a Foreign Language English teacher, I found a very easy way to teach my students the difference between "more" vs "most" and "-er" vs "-est." I'd give them a very easy way to remember.

 -er is two letters, so using it or the word more compare two things:

Joe is taller than Sam. Joe is the taller one. But Sam has more toys than Joe.

-est is three letters, so using it or most compares three or more things:

Kate is ten, but Jane is seven and Sue is nine years old. Kate is the oldest, and Jane is the youngest. Sue has eleven dolls, but Kate and Jane have only six each. Sue has the most dolls.

Too many times I hear or read incorrect usage. Many times I've heard the British Prince George referred to as Prince William's oldest son. He's not the oldest son. He's the older son, since there are only two sons. He's the oldest child of the three children. 

I guess I shouldn't ignore the related error concerning usage of more/most vs -er/-est. An adjective of one syllable or two if the second is a "y" gets the suffix, while words of two syllables or more are preceded by more/most.

Sally is the most beautiful of the ten girls in her class. She's even prettier than Ann.

Do these grammatical mistakes bother you? Which common mistakes do you find most annoying?

Monday, August 18, 2025

Women's Rosh Chodesh Elul Prayers at Ancient Shiloh

For those who have learned some Bible, the most well-known prayer by a woman was when Chana/Hannah prayed in Shiloh. I'm a longtime resident of Shiloh-- more than forty years-- and well over twenty years ago, I started inviting women to join me on Rosh Chodesh to pray Hallel and Musaf together. 




Ancient Tel Shiloh is the exact location mentioned many times in the Tanach/Bible, where the Mishkan/Tabernacle rested for close to four hundred 400 years. שילה הקדומה Shiloh Hakeduma, Ancient Shiloh is a well developed, attractive archeology site with a gift shop and snack bar. It's possible to arrange tours or tour on your own. There are activities for those of all ages. For more information +972-2-5789111 visit@telshilo.org.il.



Ladies, join us if you can. If not, arrange to got to Ancient Shiloh another time.

Monday, August 04, 2025

Haikus, So Much Said in 3 Lines, 17 Syllables

I've been writing haikus every morning for years and have a facebook group where I post them. Since the war against Israel began, many of my haikus are political, but some just deal with ordinary life. I'll include some of them here.

Honestly, I recommend writing haikus to learn how to express yourself with a minimum of syllables and lines. As I said in the title here, just three lines, five syllables, seven syllables and finish with another five syllables.


Mulling over map
while drinking friend's strong coffee
in Jerusalem

figuring out new route
to Matan* while roads dug up
in Jerusalem

despite worries slept
thanking Gd for energy
long busy day planned


coffee energy
when sleep won't cooperate
life's complicated

Gd willing Shabbat
will herald true peace, please pray
Gd is our True King

*Matan is where I study Tanach/Bible