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Pastimes : SI Grammar and Spelling Lab -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Edwarda who wrote (1799)1/24/1999 1:01:00 PM
From: E  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4711
 
Oh, you're so strict! He didn't say, after all, "I require 10% of a tithe." And couldn't "I require a tithe of 10% of your income," while redundant, be considered sort of polite, in that it doesn't leave the majority of hearers (I'm sure a majority doesn't know a tithe is, by definition, 10%) in confusion as to exactly how much you will be demanding of them. I could even go so far as to say that "of your income" could be rationalized the same way-- maybe some think a tithe is some undetermined fraction of some undetermined portion of your income-- say of your capital gains, or the income you derive from collecting rents, or gambling!

See how defiant I am? I've now taken an even more extreme position on this matter!




To: Edwarda who wrote (1799)1/30/1999 12:04:00 AM
From: Jacques Chitte  Respond to of 4711
 
It is fitting in its own way. Some on that august thread would view the poster as a natural "one-percenter". :-)



To: Edwarda who wrote (1799)1/30/1999 11:33:00 AM
From: Anaxagoras  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4711
 
<<It is wildly redundant...."New York minute"--from whence did that expression emanate?)>>

Speaking of redundancy, although common and sanctioned by Merriam, the expression 'from whence' is also a bit of a spot of a tad redundant; drop the 'from'. ;-)

Anaxagoras