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Vol. 73, No. 6, June 2000 |
Legal Writing
Common Confusing
Usage Rules
Some rules bear repeating: fewer and less, affect and effect,
correspond to and correspond with, different from and different
than, and oral and verbal are just a few.
by Mary Barnard Ray
In upstate New York, beside a spectacular mountain lake, sits
Mohonk Mountain House, a Victorian resort with a dress-for-dinner
code and a strict Victorian maitre d' to enforce that code.
I still remember, although it has been a decade since that time,
walking down the long hallway toward that maitre d's ramrod
form, two youngsters in tow, watching for his solemn nod and
slight turning of the body, which meant we had met with his approval
and could enter for dinner.
Whenever I prepare to talk about proper word usage, I remember
that maitre d'. I try to assume his demeanor so that I can,
with grace and unerring dignity, explain the rules. Impossible.
I remain the uncertain mother shepherding her youngsters through
the door. So it is that, with all due humility, I approach this
month's topic: some of the most common confusing usage rules.
Fewer and Less
Fewer is proper when referring to items viewed as individual
units.
- "Stagnant salaries and creeping inflation leave workers
with fewer dollars to spend."
Less refers to a concept, rather than individual units.
- "Increasing taxes leave workers with less money for
discretionary purchases."
Affect and Effect
These two words can confuse anyone. Fortunately, in legal
writing effect is usually the correct noun, while affect
is the correct verb.
Effect as a noun means an inevitable result of something
or, in the phrase in effect, it means in operation.
These are the two meanings usually intended in legal writing:
- "This law went into effect in January 1999."
- "The effect of this new law has not been what was expected."
Affect as a noun means a feeling, and is more
common in writing related to psychology.
Affect as a verb means to produce an effect upon something.
This is the meaning usually needed in legal writing.
- "Seeing this tragedy affected the plaintiff's ability
to concentrate, ultimately leading to his loss of employment."
Occasionally legal writing uses affect to mean to
pretend, as in the following sentence.
- "Although the plaintiff affected feelings of sadness,
in fact he benefited from the tragedy."
Effect as a verb means to cause the existence of
something, which is less frequently needed in legal writing,
usually in statements of the writer's opinion, as in law
review articles.
- "This shift in the burden of proof would effect profound
changes in the outcome of these liability cases."
Correspond To and Correspond With
People correspond with other people. Ideas or things
correspond to other things.
- "The sisters corresponded with the company for six months,
trying to explain the situation."
- "The increase in the average social worker's caseload
corresponds to this change in the sentencing laws."
Different From and Different Than
Mary Barnard Ray is a legal writing lecturer and director
of the Legal Writing Individualized Instruction Services at the
U.W. Law School. Her publications include two coauthored legal
writing books, Getting It Right and Getting It Written
and Beyond the Basics, published by West Publishing Co.
If you have a writing problem that you can't
resolve, email or send
your question to Ms. Ray, c/o Wisconsin Lawyer, State
Bar of Wisconsin, P.O. Box 7158, Madison, WI 53707-7158. Your
question and Ms. Ray's response will be published in this
column. Readers who object to their names being mentioned should
state so in their letters. |
Use different from, because it is always considered
correct.
- "Chocolate differs from cocoa."
- "Writing novels requires a process substantially different
from that needed for writing legal briefs."
Different than is considered correct in some cases and
by some sources, but it is likely that your reader will not be
aware of those exceptions. But, if you do want to use different
than, several sources say it is permitted when it is a shortened
version of some longer phrase that would be awkward to use, such
as different than the way that is within, as in the following
example.
- "Use no word different than your understanding."
Since the phrase will probably still sound awkward, try instead
to rephrase it.
- "Use no word without understanding its meaning."
Oral and Verbal
Legal writers usually need to use oral. Although mentioned
in an earlier column, this common confusion deserves further
explanation. Oral describes something spoken, in contrast
to something written. This is the meaning most legal writers
want to communicate.
- "This [written] contract supercedes any oral agreements
made between the parties."
Verbal describes something expressed in words, which
can be oral or written. Thus verbal is accurately used
when contrasting verbal and nonverbal communication,
- "The taxi driver punctuated his verbal comments with
nonverbal gestures."
Now that you know how to use these terms accurately, you can
practice in your next documents and celebrate any solemn nods
of approval that come your way.
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