Your daily usage tip hot off the press.

 
 
 
 

Smarter words.
(From the new 5th edition of Garner's Modern English Usage.)

 
 

each other.

 

each other. A. And one another. Usage authorities have traditionally suggested that each other should refer to two people or entities <John and Bob helped each other>, one another to more than two <all of them loved one another>. Yet this 19th-century rule has also been undermined in the literature on usage—e.g.:

  • “A distinction is set up in the schools between each other and one another, according as the reference is to two or to more than two persons; and yet scarcely a good author can be found who does not use the two forms interchangeably.” Adams Sherman Hill, Our English 33 (1888).
    “It has been maintained that each other should be used where only two are concerned, and one another where there are more than two; but the distinction is not necessary. The expressions are interchangeable.” John F. Genung, Outlines of Rhetoric 311–12 (1893).
  • “Failure to observe the distinction [between each other and one another] may be a technical fault, but it is not a serious offence.” Edward N. Teall, Putting Words to Work 283 (1940).
  • “Purists make a distinction between them, using each other for two things or persons only, and one another for more than two things or persons. In spite of Fowler’s rather perverse repudiation of it, this distinction is a convenient one, though so often ignored as not to have any real validity.” G.H. Vallins, Better English 48 (4th ed. 1957).


Many careful writers and editors will doubtless continue to observe the distinction, but no one else will notice.

 

LANGUAGE-CHANGE INDEX

each other for one another (i.e., for more than

two items): Stage 4

 

See tomorrow’s usage tip for the next installment.

 
 
 
 
 

Advanced Legal Writing & Editing Live Online 2023

 

Attend the most popular CLE seminar of all time. More than 215,000 people—including lawyers, judges, law clerks, and paralegals—have benefited since 1991.      


         You’ll learn the keys to professional writing and acquire no-nonsense techniques to make your letters, memos, and briefs more powerful. You’ll also learn what doesn’t work and why—know-how gathered through Professor Garner’s unique experience in training lawyers at the country’s top law firms, state and federal courts, government agencies, and Fortune 500 companies.      


        Even though stay-at-home orders have lifted, social-distancing measures are still a great way to keep you safe. Professor Bryan A. Garner’s popular seminars are all live online this year (9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. CT).

 

April 6 (closed)

April 20 (closed)

May 4 (closed)

August 31 (closed)

September 7 (closed)

September 14 (late registration now open)

September 21

September 28

October 5

October 12

October 19

 

See our website for more information on Training > Live Online Seminars under CLE Seminars tab and FAQs-Online Live Seminars.

 
 
 
 

Self-Paced Online Seminars

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Bryan A. Garner's Writing Seminars: Come see what he has to offer at  www.lawprose.org.

E-mail Professor Garner at info@lawprose.org.

For profiles, check out the D Magazine, The New Yorker, and Dallas News.

View the new Garner's Modern English Usage and other Garner books here.

For a guide to the Language-Change Index, click here.

Never miss a tweet from Professor Garner on Twitter. Follow @BryanAGarner.

Watch interviews with writers and judges: YouTube videos.

By subscribing to this service, you agree to notifications of Bryan A. Garner's seminars.

 
 

Copyright © 2023 Bryan A. Garner. All rights reserved.

 

Our mailing address is:
PO Box 195989, Dallas, Texas 75219
info@lawprose.org
www.lawprose.org

 
 
Subscription Center:   Unsubscribe |  Forward this Email |  Edit Profile