Spelling

Spelling June 2004 | Filed under Architecture, Melbourne, Photos | Comments (1)

Yesterday I went outside and noted that my favourite wall was harbouring a spelling mistake. In the dead of night, someone returned and amended it with a marginal note.

EC

Views from the Floor

Joseph says:

That's frickin' brilliant.

OT, but you and Sophie seem to be cultivating a total monopoly on The Age. How does this happen? I don't know any journalists. Is there a way I can get interviewed? I've got so much to say...

I didn't see the print version, but the online photo was sickly sweet. :) Hope you have fun on yr trip.

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This sentence is not modelled on a luxury yacht

11 January 2008
Filed under Language, Text, The Media

People paid up to $US100,000 ($A115,000) for the inaugural Singapore Airlines A380 flight last year, in which first class suites with real beds were modelled on luxury yachts, after wiring glitches caused the plane’s delivery to be delayed by two years, causing EADS billions of dollars in losses.

This sentence was already too long when they decided to add the bit about the beds. Why on earth is it relevant, when reporting on an airport mishap, to note that the beds on the plane involved were modelled on luxury yachts?*

It’s a really common construction in stories coming straight off the wires and into the paper: you have the story, which is usually two or three short paragraphs, followed by a gargantuan sentence into which somebody has packed the entire history of the subject, with no regard to whether the clauses in the sentence relate to each other or to the story at large.

* Update: I can’t read.

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