by Liz Coursen | Oct 13, 2018 | Uncategorized
Gee, why bother to breathe? When you use your language with authority, then by gosh and by golly, you look like an authority. With authority comes credibility, and with credibility comes that most important coin: trust. A couple of weeks ago, I took my car to a car...
by Liz Coursen | Sep 17, 2018 | Uncategorized
The second main use of the semicolon is to separate items in a list when one item has its own comma. For example: My favorite books are Gone With the Wind, Alas, Babylon, and The Bronze Bow. How many books are in that list? Three? Four? Not sure? It helps to remember...
by Liz Coursen | Sep 17, 2018 | Uncategorized
There are two main uses of the semicolon (;): to join two complete sentences without benefit of a conjunction, and to separate items in a list when one (or more) of the items has a comma of its own. In the first use, the trick is to imagine a see-saw. (Do we still...
by Liz Coursen | Sep 5, 2018 | Uncategorized
Yes, it’s official! I have publicly declared my love for YouTube star Randy Rainbow in The New York Times! Permalink: https://nyti.ms/2NdtCe5#permid=28486337 If you don’t know Randy, you need to! “Hey, USA we just elected us a mean girl!”...
by Liz Coursen | Sep 4, 2018 | Uncategorized
Question: If someone advertised that he (or she!) is a WordPress “expert” and a “business adviser,” but misspelled the word “adviser,” would you have any confidence whatsoever that his (or her!) advice would be worth, well,...
by Liz Coursen | Aug 27, 2018 | Uncategorized
I know a lot of people—and a lot of people I respect, a lot—think that LinkedIn is the greatest thing since sliced bread. While I’ve never been enamored of the whole “connectedness” thing and the thought of having a million billion...
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