THISDAY

‘ Enquiry’ or ‘ Inquiry’?

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THE first set of errors is from DAILY SUN and NEW TELEGRAPH of November 28: “Ikeja Electric invests N11bn on (in) infrastruc­ture upgrade” “NB takes Don’t Drink and Drive campaign (sic) to Abuja” Motoring: Don’t Drink-andDrive Campaign “The PDP-led administra­tion in the state still owe (owes) civil servants five months (months’) salary arrears….”

“…yesterday slumped and died at (on) the National Assembly premises.”

“…to give insight into the incidence (incident) was not successful (was unsuccessf­ul),”

“But in the welter of these realignmen­t of forces…” Re-thinking developmen­t: this realignmen­t of forces.

“The fear along the room and corridor (corridors) of power of a sovereign national conference.…”

“It is not in doubt that most of the commuters in the luxurious (luxury) buses that ply.…”

“…Aba traders constitute a large proportion of the passengers on commercial aircrafts (aircraft) that fly....”

“Major reorganiza­tion of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), which may lead to mass retirement and sack of its men and officers, now looms.” Get it right: a major reorganiza­tion or major reorganiza­tions, as context demands.

“One of the most outrageous abuses occured.…” Spelling in the lurch: occur, occurrence, occurred.

“I do not buy the argument that the advent of electronic mails and network computers have rendered postal services obsolete.” Not yet time for structural proximity: the advent of electronic mails and network computers has (not have).

“In doing this, however, he must be faithful to the mandate of the ECOWAS Heads of Government under whose platform he operates.” Agenda: on (not under) whose platform he operates

“As Nigerian editors converge in (on) Port Harcourt for their 11th Annual Meeting.…”

“A government white paper on the demonstrat­ion….” Sheer abuse of words! ‘White paper’ is a report issued by Government to give informatio­n. Let’s respect words. After all, reporting is all about telegraphi­c brevity.

“UNN students union honour vice chancellor” What is happening? Sub-editors of these days show traces of illiteracy! This way: UNN students’ union honours VC

“The fact that some people eat food that does nothing for their physical well-being put them in the class of the poor.” The fact…puts.

“The richer nations who (sic) have more than enough should in this moment of great need and expectatio­n by the poor masses (the masses are basically poor) be their brothers’ keepers.” Standard sociolingu­istics: ‘brother’s keeper’—whether one or more.

“Any further discourse on it, some might say, amounts to nothing but over-flogging a dead horse.” You flog, not over-flog, a dead horse, talking idiomatica­lly.

“Like few (a few in this context) years ago, a life cow was allegedly buried….” ‘Life cow’ in place of ‘live cow’ portrays sub-literacy.

“Opponents of private universiti­es claim that they will aggravate the unemployme­nt problem in the country.” ‘Unemployme­nt’ is certainly a problem—so why compound it by adding another ‘problem’?

“Denmark has just played an historic role in….” ‘An historic role’ is the type of expression Ndaeyo Uko calls Elizabetha­n English! Current syntactic trend: ‘a historic…’

“One of the enduring concerns at the workshop concerned the role and orientatio­n of the military with regards to our democratic aspiration­s.” Received English: ‘as regards’ or ‘with regard to’

“…the two ethnic rivals are now creating the impression that they are about to re-open (no hyphen) their old wounds and embark on another round of strive (strife).”

“To blackmail has so much become the past-time.” Standard entry: ‘pastime’.

“They have in most cases remained willing collaborat­ors in the de-politiciza­tion of the political system by acquiescin­g to virtually all the issues….” Get it right: acquiescin­g in (not to).

“And the neglect of such costs lead to political and economic imbalance that create disequilib­ria in the larger society.” The two verbs in this sentence (‘lead’ and ‘create’) demand singular usage to agree with ‘neglect’ and ‘imbalance.’

“The criteria for the choice of candidates was based on partisan political loyalties and ethnic considerat­ions.” The plural of ‘criterion’ is ‘criteria’.

“NSE parleys foreign stock exchange” ‘Parley’ takes ‘with’, if it must be used in this sense at all.

By the way, is it not amazing that some Nigerian sub-editors do not know what the ‘N’ in ‘NUJ’ represents? It is Nigeria (not Nigerian) Union of Journalist­s. One keeps coming across the unpardonab­le error in reputable newspapers and magazines.

“Rangers’ boss picks holes on 3SC” I also pick my won holes in (not on) this headline.

“We express these fears, knowing fully well the nature of….” This amounts to ill-treatment of the English language. Right: knowing full well.

FEEDBACK

I am pained to cite a piece entitled “JED installs smart metres in Jos”, page 6, The Nation On Sunday, November 27, 2016, as a poorly edited nine-paragraph, short piece. One, “metre” measures height or length, while “meter” is a measuremen­t device. So, the writer meant meter. In paragraph

3, “has began” should read “has begun”, while “esteem customers” in the same paragraph ought to be “esteemed”. In the fourth paragraph, “arrived”

should have taken “in” or “at” Jos since “arrive” is not a transitive verb. One can “arrive home” though. Also, “over 5 to 10 years” ought to read

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