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December 2006

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Subject:
From:
Chuck Fisher <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 15 Dec 2006 07:47:09 -0700
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Question for the group as I'm wading through final essays.  I want to (very) occasionally tell a student, "This is one of the better essays I've read in this batch"; however, the rule says with more than two items, use the superlative "best."  But I don't want to say, "It's one of the best essays I've read."  It seems to me a matter of qualitative degree, not an issue of adhering to a quantitative convention.  To say "best" would connote high writing skill, and although that may be the case, it may also mean that in a batch of otherwise mediocre essays, a particular one is better than most--but not sterling (or "best")--that is the implication I intend when using "better" instead of "best."  Am I splitting hairs?

Chuck Fisher
Professor, English
Aims Community College
5401 West 20th St.
Greeley, CO  80634
970-339-6520
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