You Can Say That Again

750 Redundant Phrases to Think Twice About

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Language Arts, Writing & Publishing, Composition & Creative Writing
Cover of the book You Can Say That Again by Marcia Riefer Johnston, Brian Poulsen, Northwest Brainstorms Publishing
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Author: Marcia Riefer Johnston, Brian Poulsen ISBN: 9780985820343
Publisher: Northwest Brainstorms Publishing Publication: April 1, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Marcia Riefer Johnston, Brian Poulsen
ISBN: 9780985820343
Publisher: Northwest Brainstorms Publishing
Publication: April 1, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
It started with a simple idea. When Connie Giordano and Al Martine, owners of the TechWhirl website, invited me to write an article, I decided to collect some of the redundant phrases I ran across in my editing projects, phrases that made me smile. Why not share the pleasure? “That one’s going on the list,” I found myself saying day after day. After the TechWhirl article was published in October of 2013, I couldn’t stop. The list grew. And grew. I smiled every time I read or heard (or said) things like this: sufficient enough tall in stature equal halves overly paranoid long-term rather than short-term mutual benefit for all involved “That one’s going on the list.” Others caught the fever. The phrases rolled in from Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Listly--even from across the dinner table. Two hundred. Three hundred. Six hundred. A new book called to me. Now it calls to you.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
It started with a simple idea. When Connie Giordano and Al Martine, owners of the TechWhirl website, invited me to write an article, I decided to collect some of the redundant phrases I ran across in my editing projects, phrases that made me smile. Why not share the pleasure? “That one’s going on the list,” I found myself saying day after day. After the TechWhirl article was published in October of 2013, I couldn’t stop. The list grew. And grew. I smiled every time I read or heard (or said) things like this: sufficient enough tall in stature equal halves overly paranoid long-term rather than short-term mutual benefit for all involved “That one’s going on the list.” Others caught the fever. The phrases rolled in from Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Listly--even from across the dinner table. Two hundred. Three hundred. Six hundred. A new book called to me. Now it calls to you.

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