Formatting Tip: Hashtag versus Pound Sign
The hashtag is handy for promoting your work while the pound sign can indicate weight, numbers, proofreading marks, money, anchor names, and other symbols in this Formatting Tip from KD Did It.
The hashtag is handy for promoting your work while the pound sign can indicate weight, numbers, proofreading marks, money, anchor names, and other symbols in this Formatting Tip from KD Did It.
There is symbolism for the writer, and then there are symbols for absolutely EVERYbody in this post from KD Did It.
A formatting tip from KD Did It on when to use percent as a word or symbol and when to use the figure or spell out the number.
I had no idea proper names could be so involved, and I’m sure I haven’t begun to touch on them in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
It’s semantics. It’s linguistics. It’s a hierarchical relationship with parts, meronyms, coming together to create a whole, a holonym, from KD Did It.
That imperative (and commanding) sentence is about more than orders and includes invites, offers, requests, negatives, advice, and warnings in this Grammar Explanation from KD Did It.
A catena is a chain of words that make up a phrase in this Grammar Explanation from KD Did It.
Taxonomy has formatting specifics for each level of this hierarchy in this formatting tip from KD Did It.
Hypernym is the basic generic label from which the self-editing writer drills down to the more specific hyponyms in this bit on Linguistics in this Grammar Explanation from KD Did It.
Lexemes are part of linguistics and morphemes and are simply another way to put words into categories in this Linguistics in Grammar Explanations from KD Did It.