Me, myself and I: Keep them straight for clear meaning
Easy guidelines for knowing when to use which.
Easy guidelines for knowing when to use which.
The question-and-answer site is getting a lot of buzz, but is it really useful? Commentators weigh in on what it is, and what it could be.
Journalists and bloggers celebrated a satirical press release that purported to be “the most amazing press release ever written.” Many PR pros thought it was hackneyed. What do you think?
Picture this: An employee publication without gratuitous, asinine photography—or better yet, with no photos at all.
A retired English professor has spent more than 13 years compiling the website, Common Errors in English Usage.
The president’s finely tuned address reflects on lives lost, heroic deeds, a struggle to recover, and the challenge of overcoming national divisions.
The consensus is that mobile will be the communication trend of 2011. Here is a gaggle of essentials for reaching your audience.
Writers shake their collective ink-stained fists at usage misuse and abuse.
Face it, Ben Franklin was right. But the rationale for ‘early to rise’ means nothing without solid techniques for getting your bones out of bed.
The indie retailer shows followers what it’s like to be a buyer, rewards top participants, and reaps the benefit of their perspectives.
Professional communicators should avoid them like the plague, but when push comes to shove, sometimes you just have to hold your nose and take the plunge.
Considering joining these groups if you want to find a new job, build your network, or acquire new skills.
Words have helped raise armies, defeat the Nazis and pass civil rights. But they can also tear a nation apart. Will the Arizona shootings focus the nation on the vitriol that has dominated the political discourse?
The airline responds to online complaints about its revamped rewards program, focusing on the critic’s ferocity rather than sphere of influence.
Sure enough, repetition works. It works in oratory; it works in practice; it works in driving a point home. Repetition works. It works.