Use of "might"

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Joe Williams

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Inspired by the "Use of `would' " thread, I'm offering up another bad habit/sacred cow:

Why do so many folks write and say something like, "Roger Clemens might be baseball's winningest active pitcher, but Raggedy Pusarm has a chance Sunday to..."?

No, Clemens IS baseball's winningest active pitcher. Nothing conditional about it. I suppose I can see it if the attribute in question is not 100 percent fact ("Ron Artest might be the most unstable player in the NBA, but Stephen Jackson blah blah blah..."). But this form gets used when the initial phrase is absolutely, positively true.

"Greg Oden might have been the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft, but Kevin Durant is the coaches' favorite to be the league's top rookie in 2007-08."

"The Chicago Cubs might be seeking their first World Series title in 99 years, but the Arizona Diamondbacks believe that a seven-year wait between championships is long enough."

So why the "might"?
 
Hear, hear.

That is completely the wrong use of the word.

Might should only be used with something that is conditional: "The Lakers might sign Kobe to a long-term deal" or "Rex Grossman might be the most hated carbon-based life form in Chicago since Mrs. O'Leary's cow."

It should never be used with things that are fact. That sentence should read:

"Greg Oden was the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft, but Kevin Durant is the coaches' favorite to be the league's top rookie in 2007-08."
 
My pet peeve is when people use "may" and mean "might".

May implies permission. Where it belongs is in obits. "Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m."

"This may be the worst Bum**** team in 20 years..." No.

But it might be.
 
I don't mind might in parenthetical use, as a way to concede a smaller point to drive home a contrasting larger one. It's strictly casual and probably doesn't add much to a lead, but it doesn't bother me because it's by the letter wrong.
 
Zeke12 said:
My pet peeve is when people use "may" and mean "might".

May implies permission. Where it belongs is in obits. "Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m."

"This may be the worst Bum**** team in 20 years..." No.

But it might be.

That's what I thought this was going to be about ... and it drives me nuckin' futs. May does not equal might.
 
Joe Williams said:
Inspired by the "Use of `would' " thread, I'm offering up another bad habit/sacred cow:

Why do so many folks write and say something like, "Roger Clemens might be baseball's winningest active pitcher, but Raggedy Pusarm has a chance Sunday to..."?

No, Clemens IS baseball's winningest active pitcher. Nothing conditional about it. I suppose I can see it if the attribute in question is not 100 percent fact ("Ron Artest might be the most unstable player in the NBA, but Stephen Jackson blah blah blah..."). But this form gets used when the initial phrase is absolutely, positively true.

"Greg Oden might have been the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft, but Kevin Durant is the coaches' favorite to be the league's top rookie in 2007-08."

"The Chicago Cubs might be seeking their first World Series title in 99 years, but the Arizona Diamondbacks believe that a seven-year wait between championships is long enough."

So why the "might"?

I might be off base on this, but what if you say Clemens is arguably baseball's winningest pitcher. There are some critics who do not think Clemens is, but "might" is the wrong term.
 
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Cansportschick said:
Joe Williams said:
Inspired by the "Use of `would' " thread, I'm offering up another bad habit/sacred cow:

Why do so many folks write and say something like, "Roger Clemens might be baseball's winningest active pitcher, but Raggedy Pusarm has a chance Sunday to..."?

No, Clemens IS baseball's winningest active pitcher. Nothing conditional about it. I suppose I can see it if the attribute in question is not 100 percent fact ("Ron Artest might be the most unstable player in the NBA, but Stephen Jackson blah blah blah..."). But this form gets used when the initial phrase is absolutely, positively true.

"Greg Oden might have been the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft, but Kevin Durant is the coaches' favorite to be the league's top rookie in 2007-08."

"The Chicago Cubs might be seeking their first World Series title in 99 years, but the Arizona Diamondbacks believe that a seven-year wait between championships is long enough."

So why the "might"?

I might be off base on this, but what if you say Clemens is arguably baseball's winningest pitcher. There are some critics who do not think Clemens is, but "might" is the wrong term.

No, what I was getting at was the widespread use of "might" when the phrase is a fact. My example of "winningest" was based on his career total of victories, not any subjective measure.

Yet you still will see things like: ``Roger Clemens might have more career victories than any other active pitcher, but Raggedy Pusarm has a chance Sunday to beat the Yankees hurler..."

And my own view is that writers sprinkle "arguably" around much too frequently. It has become a cliche.
 
Just read this on the Sports and News board; it's the perfect storm of pet peeves described in this thread.

The Mets meltdown may not be the greatest, but it is the latest.
 
Barsuk said:
Just read this on the Sports and News board; it's the perfect storm of pet peeves described in this thread.

The Mets meltdown may not be the greatest, but it is the latest.

Yup, that's a two-fer.
 

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