A brief word to Harry Potter writers...
May. 25th, 2004 12:31 amThe word 'nutter' has a much more limited use in the English language than many of you believe it has. It is not possible for someone to be accurately described as 'nutters', or for someone to say of someone else, "He's nutters" without making a large percentage of your *English* readers go "WTF????".
Please note that 'nutter' is a noun. It is a singular noun. "He is a nutter." There are many synonyms for 'crazy' or 'insane' in the English language, many of which may cause much less wincing. Please pick one.
'Nutter' can also be used as a plural noun, with some minor modifications. "They're nutters." I believe that this is where the confusion lies. It's short for "They are [a group of] nutters", not "[Each of them is 'nutters' and therefore as a group] they are nutters."
No other uses are accurate. That is all.
Please note that 'nutter' is a noun. It is a singular noun. "He is a nutter." There are many synonyms for 'crazy' or 'insane' in the English language, many of which may cause much less wincing. Please pick one.
'Nutter' can also be used as a plural noun, with some minor modifications. "They're nutters." I believe that this is where the confusion lies. It's short for "They are [a group of] nutters", not "[Each of them is 'nutters' and therefore as a group] they are nutters."
No other uses are accurate. That is all.
LOL!
Date: 2004-05-25 09:50 am (UTC)Re: LOL!
Date: 2004-05-25 09:54 am (UTC)There are things in other fandoms that vex me, but I think it's the fact that this is (nominally, it seems, at times) a UK-based fandom means that I would hope that people would take some effort to get the vernacular and so on accurate. If you're not totally sure how to use a word, don't use it - the dictionary is *full* of synonyms for craziness.