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Here’s a Preposition Proposition |
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Should you ever use a preposition to end a sentence with? What’s the rule of grammar? Discover where the rule came from and when you can ignore it. |
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| Author: Bill Moore |
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As a result, we get the rule: You must never use a preposition to end a sentence with. That means that you can’t put words like of, over, by, for, with, upon, which, and up at the ends of sentences because they’re prepositions. The rule says it’s bad grammar, but most modern experts on grammar say it’s not. So, I don’t figure I have to follow it. But why do we have the rule in the first place? Because, in (nearly perfect) Latin, the job a word does in a sentence is shown by the last few letters of the word (called a case ending), which means it’s possible to arrange words a number of different ways in a Latin sentence without losing the meaning—except for prepositions, which don’t have case endings. So, you can’t end a sentence with a preposition in Latin because the sentence just won’t make sense.
In English, which doesn’t have much in the way of case endings, how the words are arranged in a sentence is more important because it can determine the meaning—except for prepositions. Wherever you put them, it’s usually pretty obvious what you mean. “That’s the book I wanted you to read from,” isn’t only clear, but it’s a lot more normal sounding than “That’s the book from which I wanted you to read.” Come to think of it, it’s not a matter of grammar at all. It’s really a matter of style. I had an instructor once who said to me, “I don’t care about what you call common usage. In this class, ending a sentence with a preposition is frowned upon.” Makes me wonder what he could have been thinking of.
OK, so some of our rules of grammar make sense and others don’t. And it’s possible that you can violate many of them and still be considered a good writer. The question is both when and whether. Personally, I just follow my Golden Rule for Writers: Who has the gold makes the rule. Major organizations have style guides, and all my clients have opinions on what’s correct and what isn’t. My job is to write in the style preferred by the person paying me. That doesn’t mean that you can’t try to bring linguistic enlightenment into someone’s world. After all, you are the professional. But, if you can’t, you don’t have a choice. I disagree with most new style guides about not putting a comma before the and in a series. When I write, I put one in unless the client says not to. Then I stop doing it. Being a writer-for-hire means knowing the rules. It also means knowing when they can be bent or broken and knowing when they must be followed. Remember: the Boss isn’t always right, but he or she is always the Boss.
About Author
Bill Moore is the author of Write Rite Right. This compendium of homophones, homonyms, and frequently misapplied words is a necessary resource for anyone who writes for others to read. (Available on backoftheroom.com, amazon.com, and barnesandnoble.com)
Bill works with businesses, focusing on organizational development and corporate training with emphasis on communications and product presentation. He helps his clients sharpen communication and selling skills and reach targeted audiences effectively. He’s a freelance trainer, researcher, and technical writer with over 30 years professional experience. Visit his Website, http://www.WriteRiteRight.com for more information on words and writing. You can contact him personally at bill_moore@WriteRiteRight.com
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