Posted in Uncategorized

Ten Commonly-Misused Expressions From British English

See on Scoop.itM-learning, E-Learning, and Technical Communications

Mustard, unpassed. Language is a liquid constant. Its only job is to communicate and, really, so long as it does this reasonably efficaciously, none of

Danielle M. Villegas‘s insight:

In my never ending quest to speak and write in "international English", here is a great article about some commonly used expressions used on both sides of the pond–not just in Britain–that are misused very often. Misused enough that it irks me! (Although, I think I may have misused just one myself, but not horribly.) Take note!
–techcommgeekmom 

See on www.bbcamerica.com

Unknown's avatar

Author:

Danielle M. Villegas is a technical communicator who currently employed at Cox Automotive, Inc., and freelances as her own technical communications consultancy, Dair Communications. She has worked at the International Refugee Committee, MetLife, Novo Nordisk, BASF North America, Merck, and Deloitte, with a background in content strategy, web content management, social media, project management, e-learning, and client services. Danielle is best known in the technical communications world for her blog, TechCommGeekMom.com, which has continued to flourish since it was launched during her graduate studies at NJIT in 2012. She has presented webinars and seminars for Adobe, the Society for Technical Communication (STC), the IEEE ProComm, TCUK (ISTC) and at Drexel University’s eLearning Conference. She has written articles for the STC Intercom, STC Notebook, the Content Rules blog, and The Content Wrangler as well. She was very active in the STC, as a former chapter president for the STC-Philadelphia Metro Chapter, serving and chairing on several STC Board committees, and most recently was the STC Board Vice-President before the organization closed.. You can learn more about Danielle on LinkedIn at www.linkedin.com/in/daniellemvillegas, on Twitter @techcommgeekmom, or through her blog. All content is the owner's opinions, and does not reflect those of her employers past or present.

What say you?

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.