Graham's Grammar Posts

“Goods train” or “freight train”?

Historically ‘goods train’ in the UK and ‘freight train’ in the US. But nowadays ‘freight train’ is more common than ‘goods train’ in the UK. The railway authorities in the UK use ‘freight train’....

How to pronounce “schedule”

This causes a lot of confusion, even to native speakers of English. Basically: In British English: shedule – /ˈʃɛdjuːl/ In American English: skedule – /ˈskɛdʒuːl/ But many British people pronounce it the American way.

“Exceedingly” or “Excessively”?

Exceedingly and excessively are both adverbs. They have related but different meanings: Exceedingly means “very”. For example: “She wrote an exceedingly good essay”. Excessively means something like “too”: “The children were excessively noisy”.

“While” or “whilst”?

There is a great deal of discussion and even disagreement about these words. The safest approach is to always use “while”.

“Audience” or “spectators”?

In their literal senses: An audience listens Spectators watch That’s because “Audience” comes from the Latin verb: “audire”, meaning to hear “Spectator” comes from the Latin verb “spectare”, meaning to watch In normal use:...