Book Review: Kelley Armstrong’s Watcher in the Woods
Somehow a US Marshal knows about the secret town of Rockton and demands one of its residents. Now if only Casey Duncan and Sheriff Dalton can figure out who killed him.
Somehow a US Marshal knows about the secret town of Rockton and demands one of its residents. Now if only Casey Duncan and Sheriff Dalton can figure out who killed him.
Just get ahold a’ yerself and get a hold of the information in this Word Confusion post from KD Did It.
Kurt Austin and the NUMA crew risk everything to stop a cutthroat arms dealer from stealing a priceless ancient treasure.
Revised as of19 Jan 2023 NOTE: While more and most are definitely part of this pair of word confusions, I’m going to ignore them in examining important and importantly. It’s just too wordy! This was a fascinating — and confusing — bit of research with dictionaries and grammarians having opposing arguments on the difference between important and importantly. Whew. Some argued that important was all wrong while others argued the reverse. The Oxford Dictionary and Merriam-Webster did, however, both agree that the combined phrase(s) — more/most important and more/most importantly — were sentential, i.e., the phrase affected the whole sentence. Much like frankly or evidently (as sentential adverbs) set the “mood” for each sentence: “Frankly, my dear, I just don’t give a damn,” or “Evidently, the cat got into the cream”. Context is Key As you’ll see in the examples below, the choice of using either more/most important or more/most importantly depends upon the construction and meaning of the sentence in which you intend to use them. Only if you’re a pompous blowhard do you say things importantly. Then, again. . . .”he spoke important” doesn’t do it for me. Do note that the phrase more importantly is often used […]
There’s only one hurdle left in Ty Grady and Special Agent Zane Garrett’s happily-ever-after: who’s the mole who got Richard Burns killed and threatens their own world.
Be proud of life’s battle scars. It means you were stronger than whatever hurt you, and you didn’t die—and Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter and U.S. Marshal will be the first to show you hers.
If only Bruegel’s depiction of the cavalry had been true at Calvary and coming to the rescue in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Scotland Yard detective Ian Rutledge is assigned one of the most baffling investigations of his career—a cold murder case with an unidentified victim and a cold trail with few clues to follow.
Washed ashore, a flounder will flounder in the surf even as the fishing boat founders from the same rogue wave in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Peter Grant has gone undercover in a tech genius’ company and finds a secret hidden in its bowels. A technology that stretches back to the past and forward to the future of AI.