The Jewish Chronicle

Me and dad and our Shabbat grammar chats

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Adi Bloom might have been mildly annoying, but it was accepted as a price worth paying in the interests of grammatica­l exactitude.

What I hadn’t quite realised, however, was that not every family was like mine. Then I started working as a journalist at the Times Educationa­l Supplement. I quickly discovered that no-one likes a know-it-all. We were sitting in a news meeting, and one of my colleagues pitched a story. “One out of 10 teachers are —” he said.

“Is,” I said.

“Sorry?”

“One out of 10 is. Because the verb refers to the one, not the 10.”

If a look could drain your body of viscera, and then crush the remaining husk beneath its heel, that’s what my colleague’s expression would have done. From then on, I kept my mouth shut.

But then grammar became fashionabl­e again. Primarysch­ool children are now expected to know their fronted adverbials from their verbal nouns. And my annoying habit became a useful party trick.

And so, when the Tes decided to publish a grammar guide, I was drafted in to write it. Remember the scene in Yentl, where Barbra Streisand first attends yeshiva after years of studying in a shuttered room? This was what it felt like, when the editor and I sat down to debate the finer points of parsing. As with the best scriptural study, the results were at once immensely pleasing and profoundly discomfiti­ng.

“Sometimes ‘none of us are’ is acceptable,” the editor said.

I may have scoffed. Openly, visibly, and derisively.

“It’s true,” she said, citing her favourite rabbinical authority: Mary Norris, The New Yorker’s copy chief and self-dubbed comma queen.

Every scholar has her own preferred rabbi. So I tweeted the question to Benjamin Dreyer, chief copyeditor for Random House US, and Twitter grammar maven. “Plural none is fine, always has been, always will be,” he replied.

This is the kind of sticking point, I believe, over which breakaway communitie­s are formed. But it is also one of the joys of grammar: once you know the rules, you can debate endlessly over nuance. If you know that some people will be judging you for your use of “none of us were”, you can choose to use it — or not to use it — as you see fit. Grammar can be toyed with, messed with, downright ignored, for dramatic effect. As long as you know which rules you’re breaking, you can break them with impunity. As I will be telling my father, the next time I begin a story with “Abigail and me.”

www.tes.com/store/grammar-book-17

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