Joe Williams
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2007
- Messages
- 4,846
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"?
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"?