Raveled sleave of care
Posted by Pedant's Nemesis on June 30, 2000
In Reply to: Raveled sleave of care posted by ESC on June 29, 2000
: : : : : : : From the archives of the Columbia Journalism School online, Language Corner. Brush Up Your Shakespeare, Act III, Raveled Sleave, with an "A."
: : : : : : : Find the misspelling: "Sleep, as Shakespeare wrote, knits up the raveled sleeve of care." No, not "raveled," though it can be spelled differently. The error, a very frequent one, is "sleeve." Macbeth wasn't talking about the arm of a garment; it wouldn't really make sense. He was talking about a tangled skein, of silk or other material, which makes perfect sense. And for that, the spelling -- which the original author used, correctly - is "sleave." It's an obsolete word now, but spelling it right is still the way to go. Many readers may dismiss it as just another typo (a NEXIS search shows it's a frequent typo for "sleeve"), but those who know better will smile.
: : : : : : With that superior smile that oft plays about the lips of those who know a lot about very little and whose boundaries are set by a myopic imagination uncorrected by any spark of intellect or investigation.
: : : : : Pot, meet kettle.
: : : : No, I realize you're not a pedant. I was referring to the superior smug attitude of those who would derive internalized pleasure from the misspelling of a word that hasn't been in everyday use for 100's of years. There is a word, which describes those who bombard others with clichés, but I can't quite bring it to mind.
: : : The other day I saw a word for a lover of cliches. I can't remember where I saw it or what it was. Now that's going to drive me crazy. Anyway, I do remember a term for someone "who would derive internalized pleasure from the misspelling of a word..." A language snot. I think that's pretty funny.
: : I do find the term 'Language snot" offensive. It's dismissive rather than descriptive: it condemns and insults the perpetrator when what's required in condemnation of the action. I can think of places where it might earn you a punch on the nose.
: : Does your sense of humour move into top gear when you witness the physical disomfort of others - when a chair is whipped away as a person is about to sit and they then fall to the floor in disarray for example?
: It depends on the person.
Why do I get the impression that were I the person descending in unaccustomed haste to the floor you mirth would be unconstrained. So cruel, so unkind, so unwarranted.