robinbloke: (Default)
[personal profile] robinbloke
My English is not the greatest in the world and something is beginning to irk me about my recent trend in sentances.

The phrase "that that" is beginning to bug me almost on a scale of "lowly says" (Don't even start me on this one) worse still, because I'm doing it.

As I was taught it is bad practise in ones English to repeat the same word twice after one another in a sentance, that said I believe using the same adjective twice in a paragraph should be frowned upon and a thesaurus is an essential addition to any writers, casual or otherwise, armoury.

Anyway, "that that" is bugging me.

I include here by way of example an extract from a recent reply I put to a reply to a post in my LJ (phew, what a mouthful)

"...so frankly I'll babble about just about anything here - not that that is particularly unusual."

Now I've been trying to avoid using "that that" recently, principally by use of "that is" and suchlike, but in this context I fail to see how I can (simply) reword the the offending sentance and still maintain the meaning intended.

"...so frankly I'll babble about just about anything here - not that that is particularly unusual."

Any suggestions anyone? Perhaps the entire second half of the sentance is ill-advised and should have be been restructured to something like

"...so frankly I'll babble about just about anything here - but that is not particularly unusual."

Any suggestions?

english

Date: 2001-10-05 08:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] witchytigg.livejournal.com
You could have put 'that it is'. And there's nothing wrong with 'that that' except that it bugs you. It always looks wrong to me, but I know it's not.

Anna

Profile

robinbloke: (Default)
robinbloke

January 2016

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24 252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 19th, 2026 04:27 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios