Jul 09
And Just So You Know…
I did not miss the fact that there was my ultimate grammatical pet peeve in the last post. The line that suggests the random visitor is “checking for ticks due to the warm weather” should read “checking for ticks because of warm weather.” Due to is always wrong when because of can correctly be substituted. Due to is only used correctly in such a construction when caused by can correctly be substituted. But by now, you already knew that. Right?




(4.50 out of 5)




