Authentic Romantic Historical Fiction

Month: March 2016

2015 Whitney Lifetime Achievement Award

For moi?

My heart nearly exploded a week ago when I received a congratulatory email from Jaime Theler, the President of the 2015 Whitney Awards Committee. The Committee has seen fit to select me as recipient of the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award. Here’s a link to the announcement on the site today. They even included a slide with a nice quote from one of my novels!

I’m equal parts flabbergasted and thrilled.

Here’s a link to the main site, in case you don’t have an inkling what the Whitney Awards are all about. The Award Presentation is in May. I need something new to wear!

All I’ve managed to do today is reply to emails of congratulations and like comments on Facebook. Thank you, everyone!

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Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, said the King of Siam

or so I’m told. Someday I’ll get around to watching *that movie.

by Marsha Ward

From time to time, I’ll see words misspelled in blog posts, or emails, or articles, or on Facebook, and every time, they make me cringe. Yes, I’m that much of a perfectionist. Lucky me.

One I’m seeing consistently is “ect.” [sic].

I think the word, or rather, the abbreviation, is so often misspelled because very few people know anymore what the abbreviation stands for, and maybe folks don’t have a clue how it is pronounced. They kind of know what it means, but not the rest of it. So much for teaching to the test.

Instinctive teacher that I am, I’m here to offer enlightenment.

First, the proper way to spell that word is “etc.” Please note that there is always a period after it, even if it occurs in the middle of a sentence. **Yanno, like Dr. or Mrs.

Second, etc. is an abbreviation of the Latin words “et cetera.” Please look closely. The first word is spelled e t. The second word begins with a c. That’s where the abbreviation comes from: the first word plus the first letter of the second word.

etc.
et cetera

My handy Webster’s New World Dictionary (always kept by my desk) gives this information: et cet-er-a [and says the accent is on “cet.”] and others; and the like: abbrev. etc.

Now you will never forget how to correctly spell that abbreviation, because you will hear et cetera in your head every time you go to write it.

Have a wonderful day. And don’t misspell etc. ever again. Thank you.

* The King and I
** (Miss Snark’s way of saying “you know.” Miss Snark is the blog pen name of the much-missed, albeit potty-mouthed agent who is no longer entertaining the masses.)

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