Word Confusion: Done versus Dun
I hate to have to dun you for your completed manuscript, but aren’t you done yet!?? In this Word Confusion from KD Did It *grin*
I hate to have to dun you for your completed manuscript, but aren’t you done yet!?? In this Word Confusion from KD Did It *grin*
Hey, doc, the party’s at the dock, and we’re all waiting on that self-editing writer to get a move on in this Word Confusion from KD Did It, so we can Par-Tay!
I hoped that I’d get this Word Confusion out on time, if I hopped to it!
Caning, craft-wise, would be fun, but as a punishment, I’ll pass. Now canning. I can definitely get behind canning food for future repasts as a self-editing writer in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
It’s possible to be pairing up a knife with a fork as well as a couple, but the self-editing writer will only use that paring knife to slice into their manuscript in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Read this gripping Word Confusion post from KD Did It or be griping forever.
Don’t annoy me when I’m working, or I’ll get aggravated…in this Word Confusion for self-editing authors from KD Did It.
A session at the bar is likely to preclude a session at the barre or with a barré in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Oral and verbal are both spoken and heard with the aural, but only verbal can also be written in this Word Confusion from KD Did It for the self-editing writer.
Home ➢ Author Resources ➢ Word Confusion ➢ Rose versus Rows She picked a rows, sniffed it, and proclaimed it good. Well, not at the movie theater I go to. I pick some rows and there’s always something wrong with them. Sticky floors, busted seat arms, you name it. I do all right when I go pick strawberries and tomatoes where there are rows of all those lovely edibles. They smell good, too. For the fragrance of a rose though, I’d rather pick a rose. What’s that you say? You meant to say she picked a rose, rose with it in her delicate hands, and went through three rows of people to give it to me? Well why didn’t you say so! And ’cause I just “know” how much you love this, it is another pair of heterographs (a subset of homophone). Word Confusions . . . . . . started as my way of dealing with a professional frustration with properly spelled words that were out of context in manuscripts I was editing as well as books I was reviewing. It evolved into a sharing of information with y’all. I’m hoping you’ll share with us words that have been […]