Danny Lee Ingram : Grammar Nudge #3

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Southern Legitimacy Statement: I was born in Rome, GA, and raised in Trion, Pennville, and Summerville, GA. After many years as a road musician and earning three degrees–A.S., B.A., M.A., I taught English in three colleges, two of them in Georgia, after returning to my roots. I now live and write in a ‘holler’ alongside the Chattahoochee National Forest. I wrote two published books, Pennies on the Tracks (fiction–short stories) and Glass Cuts the Shadow (poetry). I also received writing awards and recognition: Pulitzer Prize contender, Pushcart Prize Nominee, Associated Writing Programs Nominee, and national ADDY awards for advertising copywriting, including First Place in WI, MN, ND, and SD. Others are awards for songwriting from the American Song Festival and various poetry and essay awards. I edited two college newspapers, the Centron and the Mirror. I now write a lot of allegorical poetry, and I write the ongoing Grammar Nudge as a refresher for advanced writers and a little push for beginners. Yes, I am a Southern writer, and there is even a ‘Dead Mule’ in my story ‘Winesaps’ in my book Pennies on the Tracks.

Grammar Nudge #3

All right VS. alright.
There is no such word as “alright.” This misspelling is rampant, even on album covers of
Joe Cocker and Grand Funk Railroad. Correct is “all right.”
“Already” IS a word, and this similarity is from where the incorrect spelling “alright”
comes.
If you have a tumble, if the paramedics ask you if you are “all right,” just say, “I don’t
know. Spell it.”
The same applies if it is only a “pair o’ medics.”