H.W. Fowler Style (@henrywfowler) 's Twitter Profile
H.W. Fowler Style

@henrywfowler

Daily tweets on writing, in the spirit (and sometimes the words) of Fowler's Modern English Usage but chiefly for American writers. Alter ego of @MatthewJFranck

ID: 2449955498

calendar_today17-04-2014 15:32:33

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H.W. Fowler Style (@henrywfowler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Make that “who was,” ⁦The New York Times⁩; otherwise you’re suggesting Mr. Miller said the executive was celebrated by communists. nytimes.com/2025/09/24/nyr…

Make that “who was,” ⁦<a href="/nytimes/">The New York Times</a>⁩; otherwise you’re suggesting Mr. Miller said the executive was celebrated by communists. nytimes.com/2025/09/24/nyr…
H.W. Fowler Style (@henrywfowler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Fun times reading a much-heralded new history by a prize-winning author, which mentions an ancestor of mine—but spells his name wrong.

H.W. Fowler Style (@henrywfowler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A subject-verb disagreement, ⁦The New York Times⁩. If you’re hung up about the plural after the verb, make the subject “connections.” nytimes.com/2025/09/27/wor…

A subject-verb disagreement, ⁦<a href="/nytimes/">The New York Times</a>⁩. If you’re hung up about the plural after the verb, make the subject “connections.” nytimes.com/2025/09/27/wor…
H.W. Fowler Style (@henrywfowler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Make that “free,” ⁦The New York Times⁩, an adjective modifying the prepositional phrase “from political pressure,” not an adverb modifying “operate.” The entire phrase “free from political pressure” modifies “operate.” nytimes.com/2025/09/26/us/…

Make that “free,” ⁦<a href="/nytimes/">The New York Times</a>⁩, an adjective modifying the prepositional phrase “from political pressure,” not an adverb modifying “operate.” The entire phrase “free from political pressure” modifies “operate.” nytimes.com/2025/09/26/us/…
H.W. Fowler Style (@henrywfowler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Quiz time, The New York Times. One of the following is correct, the other idiotically redundant: your headline and your lead sentence from the same story. Can you guess? nytimes.com/2025/10/07/wor…

Quiz time, <a href="/nytimes/">The New York Times</a>. One of the following is correct, the other idiotically redundant: your headline and your lead sentence from the same story. Can you guess? nytimes.com/2025/10/07/wor…
H.W. Fowler Style (@henrywfowler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Read closely, ⁦The Dispatch⁩, and consider the possibility that you wanted two more quotation marks in the last two lines here. thedispatch.com/debates/espion…

Read closely, ⁦<a href="/thedispatch/">The Dispatch</a>⁩, and consider the possibility that you wanted two more quotation marks in the last two lines here. thedispatch.com/debates/espion…