Promotional graphic with a black-and-gold awards-show background filled with sparkles and spotlights. Large text reads "Is Academy Awards Singular?" An orange banner across the lower left says "SINGULAR?" A shiny gold award statue stands near the center, and a smiling dark-haired woman fills the right side. A red circle in the upper left says "QDT," the upper right says "GRAMMAR GIRL," and the bottom shows the "macmillan podcasts" logo.
Have you ever seen people use "Academy Awards" as though it were singular?
Jim Norrena did and wondered whether it's always wrong. Hear what he found in today's Grammar Girl podcast!
π§ APPLE: tinyurl.com/242349p4
π§ SPOTIFY: tinyurl.com/2cgahekq
10.03.2026 18:31
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star trek themed doctors office that looks very like much the TNG/VOY era consoles. there is also a cardboard cutout of seven of nine!
one of the waiting chairs that looks like the bridge of the enterprise-Dβs navigation console except that the chair is black.
im at the eye doctors. there is a doctor here who has a whole ass star trek themed setup
09.03.2026 21:30
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I read "biped" as verb. I think that's my sign to end my work day.
09.03.2026 23:05
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An amazing book about this is "Ghost in the Wires: My Adventures as the World's Most Wanted Hacker."
It's presumably about hacking, but it's mostly about social engineering.
09.03.2026 19:18
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I just learned what I'm sure is going to be a life-changing new Chrome keyboard command: Shift-Command-A
Search all tabs.
09.03.2026 17:44
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A young white woman with brown hair in a pony tail has her hand up in front of her face as though she's hiding or blocking something. The test to the left reads "do not or don't?"
Should you write "don't" or "do not"? It depends.
Contractions are the default in everyday writing such as emails, dialogue, and conversational prose. But they're almost always absent in scholarly papers, legal writing, formal business documents, and (surprisingly) newspaper journalism.
08.03.2026 21:52
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just heard a guy on youtube say "in the grand scream of things"
06.03.2026 03:09
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I'd call that a spatula too.
08.03.2026 17:47
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A woman with a ponytail in a white blouse and brown skirt stands on a stage with her arms outstretched, facing a large, blurred audience under warm stage lights.
Think a "bully pulpit" is about bullying an audience? Nope! The phrase actually goes back to Theodore Roosevelt, who used "bully" to mean excellent or first-rate.
When he called the presidency a "bully pulpit," he meant it was a great platform for sharing ideas, not a place to push people around.
08.03.2026 15:54
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PSA for those in the U.S.
08.03.2026 01:13
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2026 Grammar Day Poetry Contest Winners
I'm behind on this, but the winners of the National Grammar Day Poetry Contest last week were all great. If you're looking for a quick, delightful diversion, check them out!
aceseditors.org/news/2026/20...
07.03.2026 22:33
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I have a post scheduled to come out this week on aphasia. (March is Brain Injury Awareness Month.)
07.03.2026 21:17
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Wow, congratulations!
07.03.2026 19:30
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The word βtattooβ has two distinct meanings, with two distinct etymologies.
The first, meaning skin art, comes from Polynesian. The second, meaning a military drumbeat, comes from the Dutch.
07.03.2026 16:54
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I know! Itβs as early as it can possibly be this year because March 1 was on a Sunday.
07.03.2026 15:15
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AP style is all lowercase and "saving" (singular). Don't forget to move your clocks an hour forward before you go to bed tonight.
In the U.S., daylight saving time officially starts at 2:00 a.m. on the second Sunday in March.
07.03.2026 13:54
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Oh, yay! I'm glad to hear it. Thanks for letting me know. :)
07.03.2026 02:22
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π€£
06.03.2026 18:36
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Words That ONLY Exist In Specific Regions
YouTube video by Grammar Girl
This is actually a particularly good episode to watch on YouTube because we talk about the DARE maps and why they're shaped so weird.
WATCH: youtu.be/F6dYztdHnG8?...
READ: grammar-girl.simplecast.com/episodes/116...
LISTEN: pod.link/173429229
#GrammarGirl #podcast
(I call them both a spatula.)
06.03.2026 17:14
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Rubber or silicone spatula and slotted turner or flipper side by side under the heading βWhat Do You Call These?β with βVSβ between them.
Some people call these the same thing, and other people have different names for them β and it can depend on where you live!
That's just one of the cool things you'll learn this week from my chat with Joan Hall, former editor of the Dictionary of American Regional English.
π§ pod.link/173429229
06.03.2026 17:14
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:)
06.03.2026 16:58
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Sneaky
06.03.2026 05:01
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Amazing! What a great feeling that must have been.
06.03.2026 03:16
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I love it!
05.03.2026 22:01
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Oh my god!
04.03.2026 16:42
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This link will take you to the post that has the link to the free course.
Once you click the link to start the course, you have 24 hours to watch the video (which is about 40 minutes long). So you can save this post and watch the course later if you don't have time today.
04.03.2026 13:25
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