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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Broadened my emotional and religious horizons.
We're in love with her too
Published on June 17, 1996

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A generally interesting, sometimes tedious book.
Safire's In Love with Norma Loquendi is a compendium of
previously published articles coupled to responses from readers. The book is an
eclectic collection of uses and misuses of words and
phrases. For those with an interest in the fine definition
and use of words, the book is a reasonable read. It is
particularly good for those who like to...
Published on June 17, 1996


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A generally interesting, sometimes tedious book., June 17, 1996
By A Customer
Safire's In Love with Norma Loquendi is a compendium of
previously published articles coupled to responses from readers. The book is an
eclectic collection of uses and misuses of words and
phrases. For those with an interest in the fine definition
and use of words, the book is a reasonable read. It is
particularly good for those who like to read short segments,
move on, and return to the book later. Each section is
a page or so in length - just right for certain situations
where a few minutes of reading is all you want. Some of
these sections get a bit long-winded and tedious, but the
next page generally has a change of subject.
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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Broadened my emotional and religious horizons., June 17, 1996
By A Customer
We're in love with her too
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4 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars "Woe is me" is not a copula, March 12, 2000
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Safire begins his book with an essay on copulas. Copulas are linking verbs, and most often they are formed from the verb "be." " John is a boy" is a copula. One of the traditional rules of English grammar is that a noun or pronoun must be in the nominative case to complete the meaning of a copula. These days in all but the most formal speech and writing pronouns in the objective case are more likely to be used with copulas. But then Safire makes an error. He writes "The grammatically pristine form of "Woe is me" is "Woe is I" or "Woe am I" but go tell that to Ophelia and Isaiha." "Woe is me" is not a copula. It is a "noun + verb + dative object" construction. There is no controversy here. The great grammarians Matzner, Abbott, Franz, Jespersen, Visser and so on have all demonstrated that in Early Modern English dative objects were less likely to have prepositions before them then dative objects today. Safire quotes a professor who says as much but Safire will have none of it. He says that Shakespeare did "intend to equate `woe' and `me.'" He then goes on to write "Sometimes the truth lies flat and you only confuse yourself looking for "understood" hidden words." By ignoring the facts Safire got it wrong. There is nothing hidden here. "Me" is understood to be a dative. In Old English the dative pronoun for the first person singular was "me," the accusitive was "mec," and the nomanitve was "ic." In Old English there was no need to use a preposition to mark the dative pronoun. In fact to use a preposition with a dative pronoun was a pleonasm. With the decay of inflectional forms in Middle English period, the pronoun "mec" became obsolete and was replaced by the dative pronoun "me". Because of this there rose a need to distinguish the dative from the accusitive and this was done by using prepositions. But the unmarked dative, the dative without a preposition remaind a regular feature English throughout the Early Modern English period.
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In Love With Norma Loquendi
In Love With Norma Loquendi by William Safire (Hardcover - October 2, 1996)
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