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Posts Tagged ‘word choice’

All together or altogether?

Posted by Catie Holdridge

It would be easy to imagine that these words represent an evolution: two words becoming one. In fact, they have distinct meanings. Here’s how to keep each in its place.

Altogether can mean entirely, utterly or completely; on the whole; or with everything included:
That’s a different point altogether.
Altogether the meeting was a success.
You owe £500 altogether.

All together means in or as a group (a physical or conceptual one), collectively; or in one place:
Let’s sing our office theme song: all together now!
Once everyone’s ideas were in, we were able to bring it all together.
We’re all together in this.

A good way to test which version you want is to see if you can put another word (or words) between the all and the together.

Are we altogether convinced we’re all in this together?

Now that’s clear, take a moment to enjoy what, surely, is the best example of people altogether confused over which is which.

<<Read the May 2012 e-bulletin

Word choice betrays your personality

Posted by Catie Holdridge

Whatever online persona you may have chosen to adopt in your blog, your deepest personality traits may be given away by your choice of words, a new study has found.

The specific words bloggers use relate to which of the ‘big five’ personality factors dominates in that person. These factors are: openness, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism.

For the highly neurotic, the most commonly used words were: ‘awful’, ‘though’, ‘lazy’, ‘worse’ and ‘depressing’; while with wild-child extroverts, ‘bar’, ‘other’, ‘drinks’, ‘restaurant’ and ‘dancing’ kept cropping up. Agreeable people happily repeated ‘wonderful’, ‘together’, ‘visiting’, ‘morning’ and ‘spring’, while the conscientious made sure to reiterate ‘completed’, ‘adventure’, ‘stupid’, ‘boring’ and ‘adventures’. For open types, ‘folk’, ‘humans’, ‘of’, ‘poet’ and ‘art’ appeared most often.

The research project – run by Tal Yarkoni, a psychology and neuroscience postdoctoral fellow at the University of Colorado at Boulder – is one of the largest conducted examining the connection between writing and personality.

Thanks to bloggers’ typically prodigious outpourings, Yarkoni had around 115,000 words from each of the 700 or so participants. This larger-than-usual sample meant that the research could go beyond broad topics focused on, and look at particular words that recur.

The results suggest we can’t completely separate our online and offline selves, however much you might want to maintain a particular facade of yourself. And this is hardly surprising, says Yarkoni: ‘Our personalities don’t dramatically change just because we’ve turned on our computers.’

Still, at the very least, it’s probably best to try to keep work and business blogging separate, no matter how lazy, awful and depressing you may find your boss.