Hey everyone! It’s Clara Kensie, back with a new Question of the Week! Pretty much the only thing writers love as much as writing is talking about writing. So each week here at Adventures in YA Publishing, I post a question for you to answer. The questions cover all topics important to writers: craft, career, writers’ life, reading and books. Together we’ll become better writers by sharing tips and discussing our habits and practices.
The other week, while putting the final polish on my manuscript, I discovered I’d used the word “it’s” instead of “its.” Easy enough to change, sure. But I was mortified. Why? This was, perhaps, the twentieth time I’d revised or edited this manuscript, and that grammatical error had been there since the very first draft. To make matters worse, the error was on page two. PAGE TWO! How did I miss it?
As authors, we’re expected to be experts in grammar. We should know the rules of grammar inside and out. Yet we all make grammatical errors sometimes. I’ll admit that I still get confused by lay/lie/laid. I have to look it up every time, and sometimes I’ll reword a sentence to avoid using it.
What’s your grammatical pet peeve? Which grammatical errors make you cringe every time you see them: messing up there, their, and they’re, or pluralizing with apostrophes? Dangling participles? Inappropriate use of “quotation marks”?
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YOUR TURN: What is your biggest grammatical pet peeve? While you’re at it, ‘fess up: what grammatical errors do you make every time?








